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TV Characters

Aet1985

Member
I was wondering is it an Aspergers trait to imagine or an inner world? I watch older TV shows like Married With Children and the The Honeymooners. I have noticed mostly when I am stressed or push myself, I imagine that I am part of the stories, or wonder how these characters would act or react in the real world.
 
Pow! Straight to the moon! Might not work out well in the real world.😱
 
There was only one TV character that I thought about in those terms as a kid- Spock.
I was nine when Star Trek made its debut and there was an instant connection with Spock.

Recently I watched the documentary For the Love of Spock, and the star from The Big Bang Theory, said when he was a kid, he would ask himself, "What would Spock do?"
That made me smile because I would ask myself the same thing as a kid when I wondered how to react to something or facing something I was uncertain about.

That is the only character I ever felt this way about.
 
When I was young I mostly watched cartoons or anime (tbh still the case lol) but one pretty formative show was Lost. I don’t know if it’s exactly as you describe here, but I think for me at least I kind of modeled behaviors off of Locke, Hurley, and Sawyer before I had any understanding of concepts like masking.
 
There was only one TV character that I thought about in those terms as a kid- Spock.
I was nine when Star Trek made its debut and there was an instant connection with Spock.

Recently I watched the documentary For the Love of Spock, and the star from The Big Bang Theory, said when he was a kid, he would ask himself, "What would Spock do?"
That made me smile because I would ask myself the same thing as a kid when I wondered how to react to something or facing something I was uncertain about.

That is the only character I ever felt this way about.
I would do this for many characters. Sometimes, I still do. I would have a favorite show, book or movie, and often think to myself "what would xyz do now" and speak/move/act accordingly.
 
I was wondering is it an Aspergers trait to imagine or an inner world?

Probably not. Though it does make me wonder what author James Thurber was thinking in 1939 when he created his character Walter Mitty. A man in his own personal dream world. Of course that was before even Dr. Hans Asperger's own autism research.

Though in later times a few have speculated over Walter's neurological condition. Much like so many of us do with more modern forms of media and characters.
 
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