Here are two scenes. They look unrelated. They're not.
Scene 1
Two people at a café, talking about a restaurant they want to try. A stranger walking past stops: "That place closed six months ago. The one on the corner is better." A brief nod, and they walk on.
The two people exchange a glance, taken aback. Why did that person stop? What did they want?
A few steps away, the stranger is also confused. They had useful information. They shared it. Why did these people react so strangely?
Scene 2
A colleague is visibly stressed, describing a difficult situation at work. One friend pulls their chair closer, puts a hand on their arm: "That sounds really hard." Another opens their laptop: "I found something that might help — HR has a process for exactly this, I'll send you the link."
The colleague leans into the first. Glances uncertainly at the second.
The second person doesn't understand why sitting close and saying "that sounds hard" counts as helping. You haven't solved anything. The first doesn't understand why anyone would respond to distress with links.
Both scenes end the same way: people on both sides convinced they did the right thing, confused by the other's reaction. The mismatch is mutual and invisible from the inside.
Two survival instincts, two empathy systems
For many autistic people, information is a survival mechanism. Uncertainty is threat, missing information is a vulnerability, and the drive to correct and share runs below conscious awareness. Empathy, expressed through that system, looks like giving someone what keeps you safe: accurate information, solutions, resources. The social preamble before sharing — announcing yourself, softening the approach — doesn't arise as a concept. Why would useful information require an introduction?
For many neurotypical people, social safety is a survival mechanism. Group cohesion and reading others accurately are what keep people safe. Empathy, expressed through that system, looks like presence: mirroring distress, making someone feel held, maintaining the social fabric. An uninvited approach from a stranger bypasses the protocol that signals safe intent — and that protocol isn't a nicety, it's the unlock code. Without it, the content can't land regardless of how useful it is.
The social preamble is as foreign a concept to the autistic person as the direct approach is unsettling to the neurotypical person. The information response is as opaque to the neurotypical person as emotional attunement is to the autistic person. Neither protocol is natural to the other system. The incomprehension runs in both directions, with equal depth.
Milton's double empathy problem
In 2012, autistic researcher Damian Milton described what he called the double empathy problem: cross-neurotype communication difficulties aren't a deficit on one side, they're a mismatch between two coherent systems that are mutually opaque to each other. Historically, the autistic side has been asked to compensate, the neurotypical system treated as the default rather than as one particular survival logic among two.
What these two scenes show is that both sides are trying to care for the other, each in the only language their system knows, and neither is being received as care.
That's not a deficit. That's two survival systems, built for different threats, each expressing empathy in the only currency it has.













