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16 People With Autism Describe Why Eye Contact Can Be Difficult

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(Not written by me)

For some people on the autism spectrum, making eye contact can be a stressful, distracting and sensory-taxing experience. Far too often, though, outsiders view avoiding eye contact as “rude” or “antisocial,” when this isn’t the case at all.

In an effort to better understand how this experience feels for many on the spectrum, The Mighty asked readers with autism who find eye contact difficult to share a description of what it’s like.

This is what they had to say:


1. “It’s abstract to me and can be draining. Looking at someone else in the eye means I am taking in everything about them as a person, and I become overloaded. It’s a constant stream of extra sensory or processing information on top of what I’m already trying to sort through in my head. It can disrupt any thought or speaking process I have going on and zaps my energy quickly.” — Laura Spoerl

2. “My eyes take pictures of the things I see, and I can mentally go back and revisit these pictures in my mind for a very long time. If I look into your eyes for too long, I become overcome with so many pictures of your eyes. It is overwhelming, and I have to look away to give my mind something else to process.” — Sydney Brown

3. “It’s just feels yucky.” — Tom Bowes

4. “To me, eye contact feels like I’m being stared at, like I’m being scrutinized and judged. It makes me uncomfortable because I feel like I’m under immense pressure, and the tension builds and builds until finally I have to look away. It feels almost confrontational, which causes me a lot of anxiety. It’s just too much pressure, and I can’t keep eye contact for very long unless it’s with someone I trust… But despite how my eyes may wander, or if I’m even looking in another direction, make no mistake; I am still listening, and I am still interested in what you have to say.” — Emma Wozny

5. “It can feel like you’re standing there naked. It’s very difficult to form a coherent thought with all of this going on in your head. My trick for making eye contact more bearable is to make ‘eye contact’ with peoples’ eyebrows. Nobody ever knows the difference.” — Megan Klein

6. “As a child, I didn’t give any eye contact at all, but I now give it (or let people believe I’m giving it) in certain situations but not in others. If I’m stressed about something, I likely won’t be giving any eye contact, and in general I’m not a fan of it. It’s hard to explain why eye contact is difficult, but a lot of the time it feels spooky. It feels as though someone is looking right into your very soul. That’s why it used to be absolutely unbearable and still is in certain circumstances.” — Alex Lowery speaks about autism Facebook page

7. “For me, it’s difficult because I feel like the person I’m making eye contact with may be able to see just how socially awkward and odd I am. I force myself to make eye contact when speaking to a person, but it can actually make my eyes burn or water while doing it.” — Jill Toler

8. “When I make eye contact, the world around me blocks out. I can only process the immense pain and discomfort that comes to my brain. This pain goes if I look away.” — Lucy Clapham

9. “I find direct eye contact too confrontational, and I don’t handle confrontation well.” — Liz Stanley

10. “It’s sometimes physically painful trying to maintain a constant stare straight into someone else’s eyes. It does not mean I’m not listening or have something against the person talking to me, it’s just an uncontrollable struggle to maintain eye contact.” — Chris Amor

11. “If I try to look at you when I’m trying to say something I have a hard time getting what I want to say out because I can’t separate the processing that takes place with both tasks.” — Nell Rus

12. “For me it can be a physical pain; it feels like burning with too many emotions, and I just can’t take it in all at once.” — Rosie Howard

13. “There’s plenty enough for us to concentrate on mid-conversation without the demand to do something which, quite frankly, feels very unnatural to many of us. You can have my eye contact, or you can have my concentration. Choose whichever one you value more.”– Chris Bonnello, from Autistic Not Weird, told The Mighty in an email

14. “It is a very uncomfortable feeling. It feels like a threat, like an invasion. I find it much easier to make some contact with people I am familiar with.” — Deidra Tucker

15. “Eye contact is hard for me because I am easily overwhelmed by lots of different input. When I am trying to listen, follow, or contribute to a conversation or just manage all my different sensitivities, it is easiest, most comfortable and least painful for me to not make eye contact. I listen and focus better when I am not making eye contact.” — Erin McKinney told The Mighty in an email

16. “For me, it just feels unnatural.” — Emilyanne Wachter


SOURCE: https://www.yahoo.com/health/16-people-with-autism-describe-why-1361708267716662.html
 
Thanks for this share :)


The line on here that rang true with me is exactly how I fake eye contact by looking at a forehead...simply amazing because I had never given it any thought that it was yet another coping mechanism I figured out on my own to blend into society. I guess I really only glance at an eye then immediately change my strategy and focus.
 
I have a mix of feelings from testimonials #6, #12 and #14.
Over one meter and a half, I can't really tell if I am making eye-contact, as my eye-sight is quickly impaired from that range.
Actually there are only very few people whom I can make eye-contact in the private/intimate zone, and I know it took a long amount of time to achieve that.
 
Isn't it the case that many animals will interpret eye contact as a direct challenge, prompting them to attack the one giving it to them?
 
I can relate to a lot of these. Especially the vulnerability bits, like they are peering into my trembling soul!

For me it's more that it just feels so intimate, almost inappropriately so. Like when you sit next to someone and their leg touches yours - I automatically freeze. It's a similar feeling.

I reserve looking in the eyes for the person I love. Doing it with anyone else feels wrong.
 
It does certainly bother me sometimes, but it's not so big a deal, mostly because I don't bother with it I guess. I have heard people actually say "you listen with your eyes," which apart from being ridiculous on the very face of it just ends up being a distraction. I never bother with such people.
 
"Listen with your eyes..." - What the...? Ears are for listening, eyes are for seeing. I would have thought that would be kind of obvious to everyone.
 
"Listen with your eyes..." - What the...? Ears are for listening, eyes are for seeing. I would have thought that would be kind of obvious to everyone.
You and me both. Would you believe that this was in an educational context? They'll let anyone teach special ed.
 
O-great! Now we have 16 way of describing how eye contact can be painful for us. Like those NT will ever get it.
 
I can look in their eyes when they are talking, but then all the body language has gone over my head, so I miss so much.
Flip side I can't speak to someone and look in their eyes, I kind of stare into space to focus on what i'm trying to say.... not that it ever comes out right lol
 
Nitro!!!!!

Its not funny!!!!

;)
Words come out on my mouth wrong all the time too so I found humor in not being alone ;)

I stumble over my words during a presentation at an international meeting of physicists once and dropped the F bomb...
Now that WAS funny :D
 
Words come out on my mouth wrong all the time too so I found humor in not being alone ;)

I stumble over my words during a presentation at an international meeting of physicists once and dropped the F bomb...
Now that WAS funny :D


Yep, I know where you're coming from ;)
 
I did that test where you have to answer the 'look in the eye' .... it was all multiple choice answers and I passed most of them, however never in a million years would I have even thought of half the words....

I'd have said they were all 'sly' or something similar ha ha ha ha
 
It does certainly bother me sometimes, but it's not so big a deal, mostly because I don't bother with it I guess. I have heard people actually say "you listen with your eyes," which apart from being ridiculous on the very face of it just ends up being a distraction. I never bother with such people.
"Listen with your eyes..." - What the...? Ears are for listening, eyes are for seeing. I would have thought that would be kind of obvious to everyone.
You and me both. Would you believe that this was in an educational context? They'll let anyone teach special ed.

There is a [remote?] chance the person who said
that was alluding to a synesthetic type experience.

I don't, myself "listen" with my eyes.
I do hear in color, though.

I don't know what the person who said "you listen with your eyes"
was getting at. Whatever it was, the point seems to have missed
the mark. That is, this way of describing the use of looking hasn't
enhanced many people's understanding.
 
I don't care to maintain eye contact when
talking with another person because I get
lost that way. It's too hard to focus on the
eye area AND keep track of what the person
is saying, or what I am thinking.

Looking away makes it much easier to concentrate
on what I am thinking and what the other person
says.
 
There is a [remote?] chance the person who said
that was alluding to a synesthetic type experience.
She was demanding that I make eye contact with her every time she said the least little thing. She said if my eyes were anywhere else, it proved I wasn't listening to her.
 
She was demanding that I make eye contact with her every time she said the least little thing. She said if my eyes were anywhere else, it proved I wasn't listening to her.

Geh.
That sounds like an authoritarian
demagogue.

I was willing to give the person the
benefit of the doubt. [After all, I wasn't
there. lol] But with the details you have
just added, I get a better picture of the
scene.

Yeah, that was a very controlling remark,
requiring all eyes on her. Huh. I wonder,
did she have so little faith in her ability to
present material that she couldn't be sure
anyone was paying attention, otherwise?

There is also the possibility that she knew
herself to wax inattentive, if she weren't
looking right at who ever was talking. There
is no need to project that stance onto other
people, though.
 
I always feel like I might be attacked or something...

I have a tendency to just "look through people" for work. Kind of like a magic eye book, loak at a point far behind them then it blurs out what's actually right in front of you, it's much less bothersome. People still always tell me I'm weird or I'm making them uncomfortable though, I always wish I could reply, "yeah well your face is making ME uncomfortable, " of course that's not an option. Keep all thoughts and opinions to yourself, bottle them up and tuck them deep inside your soul... :/
 

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