daniegirl6224
Member
Talking on the telephone is ridiculously hard for me. Is it hard for you guys too? Any ideas why it is extra hard with autism? Any tips to help?
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^^Hit the nail on the head^^It's a common issue many of us have to varying degrees. Auditory Language Processing Disorder.
In a face to face situation I'm a very good communicator, but I rely very heavily on body language, facial expressions and lip reading to fully understand what people are saying. Over the phone it's like I'm half deaf, I only hear every second or third word and I have to keep asking people to repeat themselves, or I just pretend that I heard and understood and hang up.
Another aspect of the same issue - lagging behind in conversations.
Talking to just one other person causes me no issues, I can talk to two people at once and still have a good conversation. Bring a third person in and it starts taking me a little longer to respond, bring in a fourth and a fifth and then by the time I've come up with a comment or an opinion the rest of the conversation has already moved on and what I wanted to say would be out of place. So in group conversations I either end up sitting on the sidelines saying nothing, or I dominate the conversation. I don't have to listen when I'm the one doing all the talking.
I seriously hate phones and will go to great lengths to avoid using one, this includes tracking people's exact whereabouts so that I can walk in to their office and introduce myself rather than use the phone.
Our largest phone service provider Telstra used an automated voice activated response system for a while and it caused many of us to dump Telstra because it was a US developed system and it couldn't understand Australian accents or common words.These days I go ballistic with much of any automated response in customer service provided over the phone. Luckily with my cable provider I know the magic of the word, "AGENT" and to use it as soon as possible to get the services of a humanoid.
That's the part that confuses us and NTs, most of us have superb hearing, far better than average. Yet voices seem to blur and blend in to all the other sounds around us. NTs seem to be able to focus their hearing on individual voices and screen the rest out, we can't.I don’t understand the words that come out of their mouth & many people have asked if I have hearing problems.