• 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:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Private Member only forums for more serious discussions that you may wish to not have guests or search engines access to.
    • Your very own blog. Write about anything you like on your own individual blog.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral

Not always noticeable features,

Share any features that may seem ordinary at first glance but could actually indicate autistic traits. Do you have anything similar? Share your observations!

Speaking in a very precise and well-formulated manner, using long sentences and a lot of definitions. Sounding like a "little professor". Spending an hour to formulate a two-lines long forum message like this.

(Edit: Oops... TBRS1 already came up with this, and with the first reply...)

Not knowing how to answer "easy" questions, or a long pause before "easy" questions.
🙄
 
Over the years, the stimming has changed. When I was young, I did that hand-flapping thing. Although in my case, it was more 'hand-clapping': my wrist joint would be rigid, but the fingers loose. Done with vigor with either hand, it made a reasonably loud clapping sound.
In my old age, it has long switched over to 'cussing a blue streak'- most evident when repairing an old Ford. The stress will build and build, until the fairly quiet 2-minute cuss-out bleeds it all away. Then I'll feel fairly weak and relaxed for a couple hours. Then it'll be 2 or 3 weeks until the next "spasm" occurs. I don't get physical in these sessions fortunately. It's never off my property.
Wait so you stim by cussing?
 
Wait so you stim by cussing?
I do also that kind of thing. Usually when I am jogging or something. Climbing uphill I start mumbling stuff like that to myself and also some totally random words "three", "eight", "caterpillar" and so on... I don't know where they come from, but it is relieving. Like scratching an itch.
 
I do also that kind of thing. Usually when I am jogging or something. Climbing uphill I start mumbling stuff like that to myself and also some totally random words "three", "eight", "caterpillar" and so on... I don't know where they come from, but it is relieving. Like scratching an itch.
I get stuck on rhyming words or near homophones.

I heard the word "Marshallese" and for a while I had "Mars shall ease Marshallese" running through my head.
It seems like any time I hear one word, my brains says, "Oh! That rhymes with..."
 
I'm guessing you like poetry
You're absolutely right. I looooove poetry. I like the fun, absurd poetry, not the serious high-literature poetry. I like Dorothy Parker, Ogden Nash, Gelett Burgess, and the like.

I have dozens of poems memorized and have written quite a few myself. Any time I find a poem I like, I memorize it so I can have it with me anywhere, anytime.
 
You're absolutely right. I looooove poetry. I like the fun, absurd poetry, not the serious high-literature poetry. I like Dorothy Parker, Ogden Nash, Gelett Burgess, and the like.

I have dozens of poems memorized and have written quite a few myself. Any time I find a poem I like, I memorize it so I can have it with me anywhere, anytime.
I also take pleasure in memorizing poems and can boast an extensive repertoire. However, I don’t have a particular passion for poetry as a whole; rather, it’s a skill that comes easiest to me and one in which I surpass most people
 
I've seen teenagers walking back and forth through the entire length of a train while it was moving. They might've been stimming through pressure on their feet or needed 'vestibular' stimulation (sorry if I used it wrongly). I wonder if they're autistic
They may just be antsy / ADHD.
 
A strongly associative memory, where thoughts branch wildly along connected pathways - along with an extremely good memory.
I just noticed this thread due to recent replies, and this quote is from the start. I immediately associated this with the "answer a question with a question" thread which has provided so much fun. That is all about branching and association! At any one point there are a dozen+ ways it could go. Seeing all of them and picking one is really enjoyable.
 

New Threads

Top Bottom