This is just ponderings and musings here, but maybe some of you can relate. What sent my mind in this direction was once again describing my issues with phones. English is the most extensive language in the world and my vocabulary is certainly not negligible, but I struggle to find the correct words to explain what I mean.
I’m an extremely good communicator in a face to face situation, I’m more than that, I’m a talker, a soother, I know how to be likeable and I’m extremely well practiced at it. You’d want to be by my age, eh?
On a phone I’m half deaf. If there’s any traffic noise or music playing in the background I’m fully deaf. My hearing is far more acute than most people’s. I have extremely sensitive hearing, but trying to talk on the phone is the same as trying to talk in a crowded pub. I really struggle with it.
It’s not a physical problem but a sensory one.
When I was training my dog Ruby to hunt I discovered an incredible amount about myself. I’ve always gotten along well with animals, we always seem to understand each other. I believe this is because of a natural and instinctive sensitivity to body language. Once we got used to each other I barely had to use voice at all, we just understood each other.
This made a lot of other people envious, I only ever had to speak softly and she did exactly as she was told even if she pulled faces at me while doing it. But the voice was only for emphasis, what was important to her and what she understood was my body language.
(I think she was also autistic, the few times I forgot myself and yelled at her she went in to full meltdown. She was useless for the rest of the day after that, all she wanted to do was lick your hand.)
I think this body language thing is a big part of the way I communicate with humans too, and that’s why I have so much trouble talking on the phone – there’s entire layers of communication missing in that format.
But then I usually communicate very well in text. Go figure!
I’m an extremely good communicator in a face to face situation, I’m more than that, I’m a talker, a soother, I know how to be likeable and I’m extremely well practiced at it. You’d want to be by my age, eh?
On a phone I’m half deaf. If there’s any traffic noise or music playing in the background I’m fully deaf. My hearing is far more acute than most people’s. I have extremely sensitive hearing, but trying to talk on the phone is the same as trying to talk in a crowded pub. I really struggle with it.
It’s not a physical problem but a sensory one.
When I was training my dog Ruby to hunt I discovered an incredible amount about myself. I’ve always gotten along well with animals, we always seem to understand each other. I believe this is because of a natural and instinctive sensitivity to body language. Once we got used to each other I barely had to use voice at all, we just understood each other.
This made a lot of other people envious, I only ever had to speak softly and she did exactly as she was told even if she pulled faces at me while doing it. But the voice was only for emphasis, what was important to her and what she understood was my body language.
(I think she was also autistic, the few times I forgot myself and yelled at her she went in to full meltdown. She was useless for the rest of the day after that, all she wanted to do was lick your hand.)
I think this body language thing is a big part of the way I communicate with humans too, and that’s why I have so much trouble talking on the phone – there’s entire layers of communication missing in that format.
But then I usually communicate very well in text. Go figure!