Case (
case) wrote in
fandomsecrets2014-03-08 03:40 pm
[ SECRET POST #2622 ]
⌈ Secret Post #2622 ⌋
Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.
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Notes:
Secrets Left to Post: 04 pages, 076 secrets from Secret Submission Post #375.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.

Re: No but... OT aside.....
But what if the thing (or things) that John or Mary like to talk about is *interesting*? Is it a big deal if you actually engage them in conversation about it? Yes, it might not be 'normal' behavior to point out how that open-toed pump is a variation on a wing-tip or whatever, but then quoting Supernatural or having an 'anti-possession' tattoo isn't exactly 'normal', either.
As an Aspie, as you say - if someone indulged or genuinely was interested in something like that, or mostly ignored or wasn't bothered by 'weird' behavior, would it be a bad thing, or a good thing, or a neutral thing for you?
Re: No but... OT aside.....
(Anonymous) 2014-03-09 12:52 am (UTC)(link)Um. See, most of my 'quirks' that get commented on are less related to my knowledge base, which to be fair a lot of people, Aspie or not, can have, and more to do with the fact that I have trouble telling what's socially appropriate when, and also trouble picking up non-verbal cues about things like people being uncomfortable or stuff like that. The contents of my cyclical obsessions aren't usually the issue? I think, as you said, that lots of people have those even when they're not Aspie/Autistic. It's more that I tend to ignore people at the wrong moments, or sit funny (that took a long, long time to train myself out of), or go on about something ad nauseum long after those around me have started silently wishing I'd shut up/wishing they could strangle me.
I think the main thing of it is, I can't tell generally if people have a problem with what I'm doing right now unless they tell me. If someone doesn't mind or is interested in something I'm doing, that's awesome and they can feel free to let it ride as long as they like. I'd just like people to speak up the moment they're not interested/comfortable around me, because I have trouble telling on my own.
Usually, I'm fine with whatever people are comfortable with, it's just easier for me if they verbally point out where their boundaries are because I have trouble with non-verbal indicators. Um. If that answers your question any?
Re: No but... OT aside.....
If i knew you enough to know that you didn't mind, though, i'd do it in a heartbeat. And you say you 'sat funny' - well, funny to *whom*? My daughter seems to spend half her life twisted up like a pretzel. Unless you mean upsidedown or with your heels behind your head, why would anyone be bothered or really care? So long as you're not sitting on *me*....
Re: No but... OT aside.....
(Anonymous) 2014-03-09 01:31 am (UTC)(link)Yeah. This is why I'm half tempted a lot of the time to just open with 'I'm an Aspie, tell me if I'm starting to be annoying because I genuinely and literally cannot tell', but it's been pointed out to me that that just makes people uncomfortable all on its own.
On the bright side, I don't tend to talk to a lot of strangers (though I end up listening to a lot of them for some reason - I get more life stories in bus stops and canteens) and my family/friends know me enough to say shut up as necessary.
And you say you 'sat funny' - well, funny to *whom*? My daughter seems to spend half her life twisted up like a pretzel. Unless you mean upsidedown or with your heels behind your head, why would anyone be bothered or really care? So long as you're not sitting on *me*....
Pretzel, yes. It was also that when I was a kid I had a tendency to sit/perch anywhere and everywhere. As in, lacking proper seating I'd just plop wherever looked handy, including the floor, regardless of company or location. And sometimes in preference to proper seating, because I do tend to sit 'yoga style' or all curled up and not all chairs are good for that. It's maybe a regional thing, but people around here don't like when you do that? I don't know, I can't track trends of what's appropriate where very well. (I still do this at home, barring strange company, but home is home).
Also, when I'm overwhelmed, I tend to ball reflexively. And, um, sometimes put my hands over my ears and pull my knees to my chest. I've largely gotten over that, but I've also had cyclical depressions and severe anxiety for years, and even into college I had some bad moments of literally curling up in lecture halls because the wave of people-noises drove me wrong and I couldn't make myself stand up to get out of there.
That's a specific case, a panic behaviour, but a lot of my smaller 'weird' tics have similar origins and get commented on the same way. Apparently I move oddly in some ways, and have this tendency of not looking at people when I'm talking to them, and I can get randomly caught up in sensory input which apparently can look anything from mildly unusual to really odd to onlookers.
I do try to keep the more extreme ones to a minimum now, but sometimes I can't tell in time, or can't help it (most of the sensory ones), and some of them I'm honestly not arsed to try. Um. Excuse the language. It's kind of ... it's a bit of a balancing act between what's comfortable for me and what's going to make other people uncomfortable, and for what reasons. I'm still working on it. In my bad moments I suspect I'm going to spend my entire life doing so :(
Ah well, though. There are perks.
Re: No but... OT aside.....
The impulse to curl in a ball in loud, public places is not just for Aspies! Heh. Actually, my niece is like that - she's probably borderline Aspergers or Autistic, she has a lot of behaviors that fall into that range, particularly rocking to self-sooth and some learning issues that make school a roller coaster (very smart, but can't write well, so timed tests are bad for her since she physically simply cannot write quickly enough. But ask the same questions aloud, including math stuff, and she's fine.). My sis-in-law spends a lot of time dealing with idiot school staff, but so far so good.
I would only look askance at floor sitting because i find most floors to be too gross to even attempt that.
Oh, hey, no worries re: language - you can even say 'fuck' if you want. :)
I'm glad there are perks, because having to wonder if walking across the room and sitting down is going to weird people out sounds exhausting. Although maybe people should just relax a little bit and stop being so knee-jerky.
Re: No but... OT aside.....
(Anonymous) 2014-03-09 02:11 am (UTC)(link)All of that, yes. If I could figure out how to frame things in a socially acceptable way, things might be easier, but, well, if I could figure out framing things socially to start with, I wouldn't have these problems at all, would I? Heh.
(very smart, but can't write well, so timed tests are bad for her since she physically simply cannot write quickly enough. But ask the same questions aloud, including math stuff, and she's fine.)
I lucked out academically because my language and spatial skill sets are very good. Words have been probably the longest-standing of my obsessions (etymology is such a thing), and I'm physically capable of writing and typing really well. Although, spoken language is a bit odd with me. I don't take accents well? I think I just tend to pronounce things the way I think they should be pronounced, rather than the way they actually are pronounced around me. Most of my language I learned by reading rather than hearing, so speaking can be a bit hit-and-miss with me.
The downside to the spatial awareness thing is that tactile and spatial sensations are two of the most likely things to catch me in a sensory fugue (also visual - light does funny things to me sometimes). I get caught up in sensations to the point of exclusion, which can be bad. (Aural sensations, on the other hand, are often just painful - too much noise is bad, and spatial/tactile can go overboard too - crowds tend to kill me from a combo of those and social anxiety).
And yes, floors can be gross. I don't sit on the gross ones, which for me primarily means sticky. I hate stickiness, in anything. Dust is fine, though.
I'm glad there are perks, because having to wonder if walking across the room and sitting down is going to weird people out sounds exhausting.
Some of it is an exercise in deliberately not caring? A case of prioritising. I try to figure out and avoid doing anything that's indecent or makes people physically uncomfortable or unsafe, but put less priority on things that'll just make them think I'm weird, because I've basically been the weird kid/weird girl all my life and after a while I just stopped caring overmuch?
But there are perks. Some of the sensory stuff, while it's got downsides in being overwhelming, is almost worth it just for the way the world feels just before you get to that point. The spatial thing, especially. I have moments where it's like I can physically feel the motion of the world, where it's like this big empty moving thing around me. And light. Sometimes the world looks so crystal clear for a while, physically speaking. It's sometimes amazing.
I also tend to think that being more logical than social occasionally helps in crisis situations. But, um. I would think that, wouldn't I? Heh.
Re: No but... OT aside.....
It really sounds like it! :D This is probably going to sound very bad, but sometimes I wish I had Asperger's just so I could get those kinds of perks. Instead, I basically can't touch canvas or anything 'too rough' and can't file my nails if my life depended on it - I don't get fun stuff like that. :|
Logic definitely trumps sociability in times of crisis, and many other times as well. Cracked recently ran a '5 Brain Disorders That Were Actually Evolutionary Advantages' article, and this was basically how Asperger's was an advantage - in a time of foraging, hunter-gathering, etc., being able to provide for and protect someone (which autism helped with back then) tended to make up for not having social skill, and your offspring would be more likely to survive than the next person's over, who is very social but may not be as good at the providing and protecting bits. :P
Re: No but... OT aside.....
I'm kinda...pikcy? To me, unless it's my very own house, most floors are gross. I kinda...don't trust other people's cleaning skills. (Usually.)
Heee. Hey, whatever gets you through you day. And really - logical thinking in a crisis is good. Much better than abject panic.
Re: No but... OT aside.....
Luckily, my mom did a lot of yoga and even taught some to children later on, and my dad didn't care much about it. Some family friends, though, could never quite wrap their heads around the idea that I sometimes liked to perch on the back or arms of the couch instead of just sitting ON the couch.
And yeah, non-verbal cues are a pain in the ass. I'm lucky that I have a bitchy enough personality that most people don't mind being blunt with me once I tell them so, and I managed to get enough practice over the years to learn when and how to tell that someone wasn't interested in what I was saying and I'm fine now, but that doesn't mean I don't wish people would just say so. -_- Still struggle with various physical tics, though, especially facial ones. I can keep them contained to when I'm not actively engaged with someone or facing someone, but still wish I could get rid of them completely >.<
and there it is again! :PRe: No but... OT aside.....
(Anonymous) 2014-03-09 02:45 am (UTC)(link):D I did yoga itself for the first time in college, when it was recommended to me by my disability case worker as a stress relief. And yes, most of the positions felt very familiar. The weirdest thing for me was the breathing, because I have trouble consciously trying to sync my breathing to my body's motions, but the movements and the positions were just fine. I got several comments that "you're very flexible/comfortable looking" and was tempted to answer that that's what happens when you sit/sleep this way for twenty years. Heh. (I used to sleep all sorts of weird ways, in particular, and change regularly during the night - I'm impossible to sleep next to, according to my sisters).
I managed to get enough practice over the years to learn when and how to tell that someone wasn't interested in what I was saying and I'm fine now, but that doesn't mean I don't wish people would just say so.
I'm ... working on this, I just have real trouble with facial expressions in particular, and body language as a whole. I can pick up physical distress fine (recognised a panic attack once before anyone in my class from a) personal experience and b) knowing what hyperventilation looks like), but reading interest/emotions is weirder and harder.
Life would be so much easy if people were allowed to just SAY things. *grumbles*
Re: No but... OT aside.....
At one point, the teacher told is to dip down to the side and go as low as possible, get your arm in under your front leg. Some people had already been struggle with leaning forward, some people could get their wrist around their ankle, and then there I was getting my whole shoulder in under my knee.
When asked how/why I could do that, I basically said this was how I relaxed and read books as a little kid. :P
My mother was eternally disappointed that I never had the patience for actual yoga, despite my sleeping positions apparently bordering into 'intermediate yoga levels'.