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All yours! I can't handle the cold very well. Icecream must be all warm and thus half-melted. Why must something so good be so painful? DXWill there be ice cream too?
I apologize for generalizing and some stereotyping in this post.
When looking at most lists of Aspie traits and NT traits it seems that these two neurological groups have complimentary traits. For example:
Aspies focus on detail, NTs see the whole picture.
Aspies excel at logic and systematizing, while NTs excel at "social logic"
There may be more examples, but at the moment the two examples above are the most obvious to me.
What do you think about this?
Thanks.
Getting the bigger picture; as in understanding the actual thing that's going on, rather than focusing on a minor detail. I suppose an example would be to understand a character in a book. Being able to read between the lines, and see and understand intentions. Aspies in general focus a lot more on little specifics, little details and miss what someone is about in that regard.
I remember a test I had during my assessment where they showed me an actual illustration. It had all kinds of things happening and the question was "what's going on here?". The first thing I commented on is that the perspective of the drawing was terrible (since I'm a bit of an illustrator myself) and thus critized the medium. As it turns out, what I should've pointed out was the car crash and emergency services helping the victims on the image.
When I was told what I should've seen here, I went on the debate that the assumptions of all kinds of "clues" that should give away what was going on are faulty and no one should just assume that because for example, an old man, stands in front of a dented old car, it was his... however, this is something that apparently most NT's will see and assume, or so I was told.
That's how I tend to focus on details and miss the bigger picture. And my example is quite literal at that
I take light-hearted issue with the notion of "social logic"--I claim it's an oxymoron.![]()
Thank you!I think you did a nice job setting expectations about generalizing, and you also did nicely articulating your assumptions--and you stayed well clear of all-encompassing language (ie, you said "most lists" not "all lists").
It would appear, on "paper," that the traits are complementary, but, as Marianne Moore wrote, "we do not admire what we cannot understand."
I take light-hearted issue with the notion of "social logic"--I claim it's an oxymoron.
I don't think you owe anyone an apology for how you phrase your assumptions. It's very helpful when starting a thread to state the assumptions and it enables discussion to stay within scope.
No worries. Would love to see you post again.
cheers,
A4H
More like the communal "we," at least when I do it![]()
Asperger's communities often speak in the "royal we", assuming traits that don't apply to me at all.