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Chebucto Regional Softball Club

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  3. Auto-Balancing [Dungeons & Dragons]
A forum for discussing and organizing recreational softball and baseball games and leagues in the greater Halifax area.

Auto-Balancing [Dungeons & Dragons]

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rpgmemes
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  • ? Guest
    I think nerdy stuff is attractive to people on the autism spectrum, and while people on the spectrum tend to like consistency, they also have trouble recognizing social norms, let alone following them. So some act that is in large part (from other people's perspective, at least) a deviation from social norms isn't that much of a problem to them. And why wouldn't trans people prefer to be in spaces where people don't care how they're living their life? Now, add on that exposure tends to normalize social experiences, and people on the spectrum are already weird in their own way, and the neurotypical people in those nerdy spaces are already used to dealing with weird people. Adding a different flavor of weird isn't that much of a stretch. Or, to put it another way, [Good God, who's manning the internet?](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SFoRvoC2k3g&t=47s)
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    wrote last edited by
    #41
    Nerdy stuff is stuff that you have to concentrate on and get deep into to enjoy. Which is the autist stock-in-trade
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    • ? Guest
      I am happy that trans people can be who they want to be, even if there is still a long way to go. But I am thrown by how statistics, that consistently give numbers of <1% to 3% for transsexual people in the general population, don't match the number of transitioning stories I read online. I get why that is, safe space, confirmation bias and all, but it's such a major disconnect between experience and actual numbers that it constantly trips me up. From what I read online, the percentage of trans people feels like it's around 20-30%. Or, in this case, 50%.
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      wrote last edited by
      #42
      What's even more perplexing to me is that in online spaces it seems to be almost exclusive MTF trans people, when IIRC FTM trans people are more common overall. But it sometimes feels like they don't even exist.
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