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19-Year-Old Playfully Dodges Ethnicity Question With Girl Who Turns Out Autistic And Starts Feeling Guilty

by Jeffrey Stone
December 3, 2025
in Social Issues

At a chill hangout, the inevitable “But where are you really from?” landed on the 19-year-old who’s heard it since kindergarten. Instead of the usual ethnicity essay, he grinned and answered straight: “Dallas… then the Bay Area.” The girl blinked, the silence stretched, and she ghosted the conversation for the rest of the night.

Turns out she’s autistic, battles brutal social anxiety, and spent the evening spiraling, convinced he now thinks she’s a racist. One playful dodge he thought was harmless left her drowning in shame. Now he’s replaying the moment, wondering if his go-to shield against microaggressions just became the sharpest thing in the room.

19-year-old playful dodge of a loaded ethnicity question backfired when the asker turned out to be autistic and anxious.

19-Year-Old Playfully Dodges Ethnicity Question With Girl Who Turns Out Autistic And Starts Feeling Guilty
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for messing with someone who happened to be autistic?'

I (19m) am mixed (My dad’s Haitian and my mom is Sri Lankan), but I have always been told I look "ethnically/racially ambiguous".

Whenever someone asks me the “where are you from” I like messing with them a little

because I think it’s a little funny especially when people look all confused because they expected something different and don’t know what to say,

and I think people need to just start asking what people are ethnically/where their parents are from instead,

when that’s what they really mean, and I'm not even from those places.

I was out with some friends and there were a few people there I don’t know, and this one girl I didn’t know there asked me where I was from.

I, like always messed with her a little and said “Oh I was born out in Dallas but I moved here when I was real young, like still a baby”

She then hesitantly asked the “no but like where are you from from”. I said “ohh, I’m from the bay, but I came down here for college”.

You could see her pause and I laughed and told her and she just said oh okay.

And then we didn’t really speak the rest of the time and she kept her distance from me.

After, my friend (19f) told me that the person I was messing with was autistic and has social anxiety and I made her really uncomfortable with what I said.

I said why I was just messing with her. She then responded that she got scared I thought she was r__ist or something and that she just didn’t like it.

I didn’t know she had those issues and I didn’t see anything wrong with it at first but now I’m reconsidering and feel bad for making her uncomfortable.

Meeting new people is already a social minefield. Throw in race, ethnicity, and differing communication styles and you’ve got yourself a full-blown sitcom episode. And then finding out that new person is autistic. At this point, there is nothing left to say.

On one side, the Redditor’s playful literal answers are a pretty common pushback against the dreaded “where are you really from?” question, a phrase that often carries the unspoken subtext “you don’t look like you fully belong here.”

Research backs this up: a 2022 study published in the Journal of Social Issues found that racial microaggressions like repeated origin questions are linked to higher stress and lower sense of belonging among people of color, even when the asker insists they’re “just curious.”

On the other side, autistic individuals and people with social anxiety can find sarcasm, teasing, or any deviation from literal communication genuinely distressing.

As noted in Autism Parenting Magazine by Stephanie Bethany – an autistic adult herself and a therapy assistant, “Autistic people are more likely to take the spoken words literally rather than being able to determine what the speaker wants to convey.” That distress doesn’t require malicious intent, it just requires a mismatch in communication styles.

So who’s “right”? Both, and neither. The girl’s question carried an unfortunate (and common) racial undertone, whether she realized it or not.

The Redditor’s response, meanwhile, unintentionally hit a neurodivergent sore spot. It’s the perfect storm of two marginalized experiences clashing instead of canceling each other out.

The bigger conversation this sparks? Maybe we all need gentler scripts: “Mind if I ask about your family background?” or “I love learning about people’s heritage, only if you’re comfortable sharing!” Clear intent, enthusiastic consent, zero guessing games.

At the end of the day, a quick “Hey, I was just messing with you – my parents are Haitian and Sri Lankan” after the joke would probably have cleared the air in ten seconds flat. Lesson for everyone: a tiny dash of context can prevent a whole evening of spiraling anxiety.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Some people insist that asking “where are you really from” is inherently racist or xenophobic, regardless of intent.

Marzipan_civil − NTA. "Where are you really from" is a r__ist or at least xenophobic question. People need to stop quizzing everyone on their bloodlines.

You weren't messing with her because she is autistic, you were messing with her because she asked an invasive question.

Jollyramb1er − NTA. Autistic people, like the rest of us, should learn that "where are you from from" is a r__ist question.

"Where are you from" means where are you from. "Where are you from from means please explain why you are not white.

AlexanderSinclair − NTA. And asking someone where they're "from from" IS kinda r__ist

A-R-U − "But where are you really from" is never a good/polite thing to say, no matter what you've got going on. NTA.

Some people argue that autism does not excuse racist behavior and she already suspected her question was racist.

AmpleSnacks − NTA. she got scared I thought she was r__ist If it can occur to her that she could be r__ist for asking then she shouldn’t be asking.

Opening_Baker_5436 − She thought she was being r__ist and SHE didn’t like it? The question itself is so r__ist. NTA.

Alwayzcompasstion − Just bcz one has autism does not mean she can’t be r__ist. It was a r__ist question.

It also occurred to her that the question could come off as r__ist. So she has some understanding. This may be surprising but she’s r__ist.

This would not be a question that would have occurred to her to asks a white person.

Now if she was going around to every person, including white people, asking them this, then I would have a different answer.

However, this was not what happened. You’re NTA

MysticBBQ − She was being r__ist - "where are you really from? " - come on man, she used being autistic as an excuse

Some people say OP is simply answering the literal question truthfully and the discomfort is on the asker.

chaixlattex − I think your phrasing in your post is poor here, you aren't messing with people, or making a joke,

you're answering their actual question truthfully, you are from the places you've actually lived, your ethnic heritage is entirely different.

When people insist on knowing where you're really from it implies you don't belong where you are living just because of your ethnic background, and that's r__ist.

They might not mean it to be, but it is. You aren't messing with anyone by answering their question in a truthful way

and if they feel upset at the implications, that's 100% on them.

You don't owe people comfort, especially when they are trying to make you uncomfortable.

I cannot believe anyone is telling you that you were wrong here. NTA.

akiraMiel − I'm autistic too and you're NTA.

If I wanna know the ethnicity of someone I ask about their heritage (is that the right word ) and not where they were born.

Although I still ask that because I'm nosy lol.

A harmless prank met an unsuspecting communication difference and somehow everyone ended up feeling a little bruised. So, dear readers: Was the Redditor’s joke fair game when the question itself is loaded nine times out of ten, or should he have clocked the vibe and switched to straightforward mode?

Would a quick clarifying sentence have saved the night? Drop your take: would you have answered literally, spilled the heritage tea right away, or just changed the subject? The comments are open and we’re ready for the debate!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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