@SimonSays, I have seen those optical illusions before. This one isn't working for me but I suspect that the image is just too small on my tablet screen.
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I don't think I'm dyslexic. Maybe I am mildly dyslexic...that doesn't seem to jive with having been an avid reader as a child/young teen though. I constantly had my nose in a book.
@Nairobi, concerning your vision, if you read the link I posted light trails are noted as being part of the syndrome.
I am going to interupt myself here for an inspired thought, does anyone else think Vincent VanGough was autistic? Some of his art seems to reflect "visual snow" as it shows clear distortion. I know some people has suggested "astigmatisim" as an explaination but I think visual snow makes more sense.
Back to our regularly scheduled answer...
Regarding other visual anomalies, when I was a child I often watched photographs because the people appeared to be talking to me. I no longer experience this but I do have another example that is a holdover from childhood. Heavily patterned things like wallpaper, bedspreads or other fabrics, appear to me like the pattern is moving. Think a vine seems to grow even though it never gets longer, that sort of thing.
I have had a hallucination when I was given morphine after a surgery. While this pattern movent is hallucinatory, it is not like the same kind of hallucination. I would not be at all suprised if it is neurological as well, another miswiring in the visual cortex.
I tend to think of it as an issue of light mismanagement as I only get this effect in half light / dim light situations. It is a tidy explaination that eases my mind anyway.
I can well imagine that this sort of thing can happen without a pattern to look at. Our aspie brains are particularly good at pattern recognition so it makes sense that we also can "conjure" patterns out of of contrasting shadows and available light. Our brains might then try to make sense of the oddity. Does that make sense?
I am sorry to introduce a really creepy aspect into this conversation - but does anyone else see things that aren't there? Not like a full on schizoprhenic hallucination during the day - I don't know how I would deal with that. But at night sometimes I see weird things that aren't there. Usually it's something I see for a split second, then it disappears. A few times it has lasted a few seconds before it disappears. In my family house growing up, it was when I was laying down, but not asleep - all kinds of weird things happened in that house, though. Everywhere else, it's when I first wake up at night, when I open my eyes, and it's gone in a split second. I hate it when it happens, it gives me a fright.
Lol. Did you not see the dot or more than one?I was trying to figure out which dot it wanted me to look at.
Lol. Did you not see the dot or more than one?![]()
I was trying to figure out which dot it wanted me to look at.
I was trying to figure out which dot it wanted me to look at.
When I'm first waking up I sometimes see what I can only call flying spiders.
Don't know what that's about. It's clearly a brain malfunction as a part of waking up.
I once opened my eyes from a very deep meditation (I may have dropped off asleep for a moment) to see a stereotypical leprechaun floating in front of me about 6 foot away. He genuinely seemed shocked that I had seen him and vanished immediately, but I still got enough of a look to see he was dressed just as one would imagine him to be. I'd never seen anything like that before or since, and I cannot imagine why he would've been there anyway, but it certainly felt real at the time, like I had seen something I wasn't supposed to see, wouldn't normally see.I am sorry to introduce a really creepy aspect into this conversation - but does anyone else see things that aren't there? Not like a full on schizoprhenic hallucination during the day - I don't know how I would deal with that. But at night sometimes I see weird things that aren't there. Usually it's something I see for a split second, then it disappears. A few times it has lasted a few seconds before it disappears. In my family house growing up, it was when I was laying down, but not asleep - all kinds of weird things happened in that house, though. Everywhere else, it's when I first wake up at night, when I open my eyes, and it's gone in a split second. I hate it when it happens, it gives me a fright.
Yes, that's the kind of thing that I usually see, actual individuals or parts of individuals. I think the logical explanation is that it's some kind of dream function malfunctioning - I heard a schizophrenic woman say that's how she thinks of her hallucinations....I wish I'd see something lovely for a change, but it's usually something pretty horrifying.I once opened my eyes from a very deep meditation (I may have dropped off asleep for a moment) to see a stereotypical leprechaun floating in front of me about 6 foot away. He genuinely seemed shocked that I had seen him and vanished immediately, but I still got enough of a look to see he was dressed just as one would imagine him to be. I'd never seen anything like that before or since, and I cannot imagine why he would've been there anyway, but it certainly felt real at the time, like I had seen something I wasn't supposed to see, wouldn't normally see.