Oh so you're autistic? Name all model trains then!
Lionel, Mikes Train House, L.G.B., - wait a minute...
You've been autist-baited!
๐๐๐ Hear ye! ๐๐๐ Hear ye!!๐๐๐
Whereas this petition has been formally requested, I hereby declare and/or proclaim with the memory of Casey Jones and all others present to serve as witnesses that, henceforth, all model trains shall be legally named "Then"!
Disclaimer: IANAL (I am not a lawyer; pronounced: I-anal) and this is not legal or financial advice.
And my parents'. And some of my grandparents'.
The ones assuring you "that's normal, just try harder" you mean?
Oh no, they were full on messes who had no idea why. But I know. Too late, but I know.
Yup. After my diagnosis there was a lot that suddenly made sense looking back on it.
Ok this is kinda unrelated but the phrase "looking back on my life" triggered a meta-memory of one of my favorite lesser known Green Day songs from my adolescence, and I've decided to subject you all to the lyrics of the first verse/chorus.
Looking back upon my life and the places that I've been
Pictures, faces, girls that I've loved, I try to remember when
Faded memories on the wall, some names I have forgotten
But each one is a memory, I look back on so often
I look into the past
I want to make it last
I was there
I was there
Thanks, hadn't heard that one in a while.
Cool! Btw, how did you get those words to come out purple??
They're not purple on my side, must be your app. I just formatted it as a code block with the ``` on either side.
Weird, I'm on desktop. Maybe it's my theme: darkly-pureblack. Anyway, here's how it looks on my end:
Huh, weird. No clue!
Mine (web browser) does the same. Looks as if [programming code] syntax hilighting failed at determining the programming language but hilighted some possible keywords anyway. iow:
if viewing_app.defaults['hilight_code'] == true:
try(codeblock.interpret('is this Python somehow?'))
it can't be that hard to photoshop some rainbow puzzle pieces over that ohio flag cmon now
Mri is the only way to be sure
I found out at 40. According to everyone in my life, they were pretty sure I was autistic within mins to hours of meeting me.
Found out at age 44 that my autistic-like behaviour is due to being born without a corpus callosum in my brain.
woahhhh, you are two!! do you have any other interesting differences due to the lack of corpus collosum, like being able to draw 2 separate things at the same time?
here's a relevant video that describes a neat experiment: https://youtu.be/wfYbgdo8e-8?si=hmkE5MzRvjPW2fMu
I have a somewhat elevated sensitivity to interpersonal interactions that result in involuntary embarassment displays that i try to ignore but seldom succeed at. And that video is limited in accuracy as it is predicated on the idea that the split brain was originally a single organ but became divided at some point leading to more defined differences between the two sides whereas those of us born this way have had our whole lives to cope, adjust, and compensate at the conscious as well as subconcious level. Ive had 60 years for both of me to figure out the best way to function and aside from the occasional redfaced reaction to a normally undetectable stimulus i think ive done pretty well
that video is limited in accuracy as it is predicated on the idea that the split brain was originally a single organ but became divided at some point leading to more defined differences between the two sides whereas those of us born this way have had our whole lives to cope, adjust, and compensate at the conscious as well as subconcious level
Thanks for sharing! What would you change in the video?
I have a somewhat elevated sensitivity to interpersonal interactions that result in involuntary embarassment displays that i try to ignore but seldom succeed at...and aside from the occasional redfaced reaction to a normally undetectable stimulus i think ive done pretty well
That sounds interesting! Could you share some stories with us please?
Not a lot to tell. Always happier (and safer) alone so work to maintain that lifestyle as much as possible outside of having to work for a living like everyone else. Like i said the only way this condition differentiates me from "normal" people is the reflex redface that pops up at inconvenient times. Since that video is as old as it is i would add some more details of new theories that have been brought to light since then. People like me are not different enough from anyone else to be noticeable unless you spend a lot of time with us, which, as i said i work to avoid ,)
learned something new.. thanks, brah
what is the original image?
I feel so one-dimensional
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