Anonymous wrote:It means "weird".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think strange and odd are more pejorative. Quirky is more someone who beats to their own drum. Possibly (probably?) but not necessarily neurodiverse. I have one like this who doesn’t have any formal dx but has different interests from the rest of her kids in MS. She’s bookish, loves plants/gardening, loves mountain biking, never uses her phone, doesn’t wear anything remotely trendy (such as jeans, tank tops, hoodies, lululemon, cool sneakers -she wears Merrells and t shirts from vacations or dh SEC alma mater). She has a handful of nice friends, does great in school - shes no harder or less happy than my other two more conventional kids. I wouldn’t be surprised if down the road she gets an autism or adhd dx but I have had her evaluated and there was no finding of either
She’s not autistic. I don’t know why so many people want to diagnose their child as autistic because they aren’t basic. I’d be happy if I had a child that fit that description. She sounds great, you didn’t describe one trait that would describe a person with autism and you should feel nothing but pride.
Respectfully, boiling down the spectrum of neurodivergence to “basic” vs “autistic” is absolutely ridiculous
NP. Not wearing trendy clothes or being bookish is not neurodivergent. I believe that was PP’s point, and they’re correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:People frequently say their DC is quirky. I know the dictionary definition, but usage here seems different from "strange" or "odd". What does it mean here?
Weird behaviors
Geeky
Spazoid
Dorky
Nerdy sometimes with one or more of the above.
Anonymous wrote:People frequently say their DC is quirky. I know the dictionary definition, but usage here seems different from "strange" or "odd". What does it mean here?
Anonymous wrote:DCUM often uses it to mean neurodivergent.
In prior world use, it meant the kid who was heavily into theater, musicals, rode a unicycle, did mime, was into folkdance group, did standup comedy or slam poetry, etc.