Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral
I had a similar situation at work Monday. We found out someone from the team's boyfriend passed away, so we had a group meeting to be told about this. Everyone started crying and I was the only one just standing there unphased. Sounds mean, but I did not know the person so I was not sad. Someone kept looking at me and I just found it funny because we kept looking at each other when the other averted their eyes, so we kept missing each other. I had to repress my laughter but a few saw me smile... was awkward because I wasn't smiling for the reason they thought...Was attending a wake, and one minute my spouse was beside me and then he was missing. This was a wake, where everyone sits around and some cry. I saw him through a window running around outside in the cemetery. I walked after him and discovered him sitting on a bench, laughing. Asked him what was funny; 'people's faces when they're crying, they screw them up and distort them, and they make me want to laugh.'
I've not been to any kind of wake or funeral since, where people's crying faces didn't make me want to laugh, I have to cover my mouth so I won't burst out laughing. He's right, people do look funny when they cry.
This might explain why my brother, who is also autistic used to rock with laughter at tense moments in movies and also in real life. I have seen NTs laugh hysterically at scary or disturbing scenes in movies, too.Oh god! These comments made me laugh so hard!!!
You're all right. It must be some sort of mechanism to avoid sadness or any bad feeling.
I even laugh when I'm physically hurt.
This might explain why my brother, who is also autistic used to rock with laughter at tense moments in movies and also in real life. I have seen NTs laugh hysterically at scary or disturbing scenes in movies, too.
Actually this is one of the few movies that made me cry! This scene was not at all funny to me, I don't know about other people.Makes me think of this:
Putting this behind a spoiler as it might be triggering. I agree with Judge in that the element of time it takes to process is where difficulties can compound a situation's social dangers. Interesting that timing is also important to jokes. Maybe that is related(?)
once when driving I got in trouble and really upset someone because of my double error/faux pas. We were passing by an unfortunately and sadly familiar (here in the Western U.S.) scene of a deer that'd been hit and killed by a vehicle.
Without thinking, I uttered, "oh dear." And then, also spontaneously, I laughed at what a stupid mistake I'd made. They did not take it that way at all
I like to keep a catalogue of funny, or interesting sounding words in my mind.