Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral
I was accused of lacking intellect because of my filthy mouth :/ Sadly I still cuss like a sailor to this day ...
But you could also cuss with big words![]()
LOL, I remember that movie!This reminds me a bit of he movie Idiocracy where Luke Wilson's character is cryogenically frozen and wakes up a thousand years in the future as the world's smartest man and everyone thinks that he "talks like a fag," I've encountered a little bit of that from time to time.
Wow, that's a great way to word it, about picking up my verbal communications style from a peer group.Yes. You are by no means the first to bring up this issue. Verbal communication between individuals with different education and social backgrounds can have issues.
As you noted, you learned how to communicate from books, and while you don't specify, possible TV programs that are "aimed" at a slightly older audience. You didn't pick up your verbal communication style from a peer group. There's probably more to it than that, but that's probably the starting point.
Wow, I didn't know they were doing away with the Aspergers diagnosis. To me, the thing I liked about having a different word is that when you just say "Autism," I think people picture someone who's barely functional or just way, way off. I always feel like if I just say "autistic" people will think I'm lying or exaggerating, especially because over the years I've learned more and more how to pass as normal. I think that's part of why some people don't seem to believe me and will take me the wrong way, thinking I'm normal and should know betterI was diagnosed with Asperger's two years ago. Actually the psychologist who diagnosed me called it autism because she knew the DSM 5 was coming out and Asperger's was going to be eliminated. Because I had training in science I spent the next four weeks scouring all of the scientific literature to learn everything I could about Autism. (This is typical of behavior for someone on the spectrum who acquires a new special interest.) I continue to follow the research but not so compulsively. I believe my training in biology helps me to understand autism better than most aspies but mostly it is esoteric knowledge without practical use because autism is still very poorly understood. For example, I remember one article that described thirteen different biochemical pathways that can be attributed to autism. That is interesting but science does not know how these pathways interplay in an individual to create autistic behavior and not every individual on the spectrum has the same affected pathways. The basic situation in autistic science is that the research implicates many specific physiological particulars and psychologists are very good at identifying gross autistic behaviors but the connections between the neurophysiological details and behavior remains a mystery for most aspies. There are exceptions, for example fragile X syndrome and, as chocaholic mentioned on another post, the MTHFR gene, where autistic behaviors can be directly related to a genetic cause.
Wow, that's a great way to word it, about picking up my verbal communications style from a peer group.
The Anne books are some of my favorites.Has any one read Anne of Green Gables? The main character is frequently criticised by other characters for her use of big words. She is a child and she says she looks forward to being an adult because then people won't mind her peculiar use of language.
Yes, I have been ridiculed for the words I use. I was in the ER for some serious pain in my right shoulder. Blood pressure was sky high (a little over 200/a little over 100) yet when the doctor asked about the pain when he first walked in I said it was "excruciating" and he looked put-off and asked "Where did you hear a word like that?!" and I had no idea how to respond. I was shocked and hurt. Mom said something to the effect of 'she has always been well read.' To this day, I am ticked at that doctor. He didn't even attempt to help my pain. He only barely suggested I use a sling for my arm until it felt better. Yes, he felt around the joint and determined it was a rotator cuff issue.
I am still very angry with that doctor and how I was treated. And it seems as I age I become more and more "autistic." That ER incident occurred when I was 21 and I am 30 years old now. I have become more and more isolated as the years pass. My vocabulary gets more and more technical as well. I wish I knew why I was getting "worse" but as long as I am still half-functioning I will not question it.
It was, and I was shocked and had no idea how to respond. I think I did say something but only after mom said what she did. As far as getting "worse" I have noticed as I age I find it more and more difficult to try to dumb-down my vocabulary. It's not like I am actually speaking words that are not understandable, but I seem to get more and more technical each year. I try to re-word my phrases into less technical phrases but it's getting tiring. It seems to be becoming more difficult. I use an an advanced version of an electronic cigarette as I quit smoking 4 years ago (thankfully!) and when explaining how it works to those who are interested I have no idea how to do it without using the correct terms. What I end up saying is "the battery heats up a thingy that vaporizes the nicotine liquid which I then inhale" and to me that sounds very dumb and like I'm talking to a kid, but I can't figure out how to explain it any other way. I know that the voltage of the battery's electricity flows through the atomizer, which is like a light bulb filament, it heats up enough to vaporize the liquid. Hey that works! I can say that!That's an incredibly rude & condescending remark, *especially* from a doctor! I've had a lot of experiences like that lately, but I just can't see becoming more articulate as 'getting worse'. People often assume we're stupid because *they* don't understand us, so as I become more self-aware I care far less for being polite to those who are so rude to me. "Doc, that means 'it hurts really bad,' will you help me or not?" Of course I never think of the perfect reply until they're gone, but the less I care about coddling them the better I get at responding directly.
It was, and I was shocked and had no idea how to respond. I think I did say something but only after mom said what she did. As far as getting "worse" I have noticed as I age I find it more and more difficult to try to dumb-down my vocabulary. It's not like I am actually speaking words that are not understandable, but I seem to get more and more technical each year. I try to re-word my phrases into less technical phrases but it's getting tiring. It seems to be becoming more difficult. I use an an advanced version of an electronic cigarette as I quit smoking 4 years ago (thankfully!) and when explaining how it works to those who are interested I have no idea how to do it without using the correct terms. What I end up saying is "the battery heats up a thingy that vaporizes the nicotine liquid which I then inhale" and to me that sounds very dumb and like I'm talking to a kid, but I can't figure out how to explain it any other way. I know that the voltage of the battery's electricity flows through the atomizer, which is like a light bulb filament, it heats up enough to vaporize the liquid. Hey that works! I can say that!
Things like that are what make it hard for me to communicate with others. And when speaking about a medical condition I have been researching I tend to understand and use specific medical terms which others do not comprehend. I know I'm not the only one with this issue, but it just makes me want to avoid talking about the things I am interested in. I don't know where to turn for conversation with people who likely can understand what I am saying. I know this forum is a good starting point, but even then I feel scared to even strike up a conversation because I worry about offending others with my over-use of logic. I find it difficult to not be logical in everything I think about and speak. It's very frustrating for me.
Yes--sort of. I try and avoid sounding bombastic with my vocabulary, but sometimes it just slips out. I was telling an artist the other day I was working with to not make piece of art look too derisive and he looked at me like I had lobsters crawling out of my ears, to quote the late Jean Shepherd. Sometimes it just comes out![]()