Wolfgangus Faldestolius
Little notes from an armchair
... There are differences in the brain in the way people with autism process information, cognitive dfferences that can't be helped by CBT, but as many symptoms of ASD are exacerbated by anxiety, depression and PTSD, then a reduction of these will also help the autistic person cope much better with his or her autism - or specifically those traits of autism that are fed by anxiety.
One of the problems that I have, and others have also reported too, is an inability to process conversation, which in turn affects my ability to socialise or fit in a work environment. I'm just that bit slower to process speech, and don't automatically process and understand social information. Conversation is non-verbal as much as verbal, emotional signals or ememes being exchanged alongside the verbal information, and I often fail to send and receive this information. This means that in any conversation, I feel detached, disconnected, like watching TV rather than actually being a participant in the conversation. This is a cognitive difference, perhaps a part of my brain didn't fully mature or didn't connect up the way it should, who knows. I tried CBT for a while, and it did help me by teaching me to live more in the here and now and let go of some anxiety through mindfulness ...
This is nice, that you were helped where it could help.
I've found I get better at information processing because I'm in my 60s, but there are instances where I'm still on the slow side.
Formerly, what's your own experience in information processing then?