WHERE TO GET THE BOOK: http://libgen.is/book/index.php?md5=F6B31A8DAFD6BD39A5986833E66293E6

PRIOR THREADS:

So, it’s been a minute. Apologies. Life has been overwhelming me lately. School, work, more failed attempts at dating, etc. Please be patient, I have autism (probably) creature

I was also reading Devon Price’s new book, Unlearning Shame. Definitely recommend. He dismantles shame as a social construct of behavioral reinforcement and the undergirding of the lie that is rugged individualism, and prescribes the cure of building community and understanding social interconnectedness on a deep level. Made me re-examine just how much shame is woven into the fabric of the way I conduct myself and hoo boy it’s a lot. I blame my Catholic upbringing.

Anyway, I figured before I dive back into the next chapter it’d be nice to get caught up and see where everyone is at. Share your thoughts here, ask questions, get caught up. I want to make a new post next week but first I have to write an informative speech and then an essay about some story or another

Let’s cut down on the decision paralysis with some discussion questions:

  • What’s new with you, neurodiversity-wise, since the last thread?
  • Any points of contention, confusion, or questions from prior chapters?
  • Post any thoughts specific to the last chapters that you didn’t get to share before.

Tag post to follow.

    • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      For misophonia, especially if you’re late-diagnosed or undiagnosed, it’s important to keep in mind that you probably have been taught to ignore your sensory sensitivity and to suppress it as much as possible.

      What this means is that you’re likely pushing yourself in terms of idk, I guess what I’d call your “sensory load”, before it even hits the point where it’s physically painful for you. Think of it in terms of music being too loud for a person but not to the point where it actively hurts them - this is still going to cause a person to become overwhelmed, distressed, exhausted, and to struggle with focus etc. This Is likely going to have a significant impact on your overall wellbeing as well as your experience of executive dysfunction and burnout etc.

      When it comes to considering your sensory diet there are a few different strategies managing it, no matter what your sensitivity happens to be:

      • Avoidance

      This term isn’t a value-judgment btw. Avoidance is what people engage in when they don’t go outside in the peak of the Texas summer because it’s too hot - that’s not a negative thing, it’s just plain good sense.

      Avoidance can mean scheduling things outside of peak hour for traffic or business. It can mean shopping during quiet hours or instead shopping online where possible. It can also mean removing yourself from an environment when you notice that you’re near your limit or moving away from the source of the sound.

      • Mitigation

      This is where you mostly have adaptive devices.

      In my (admittedly limited) experience, over-ear noise cancelling headphones are more effective than in-ear ones.

      There are also noise-filtering devices like Hearos, Loop, and Flare Calmer. If you regularly experience pain from the day-to-day soundscape then I’d lean more towards Hearos or Loop over Flare except in situations where it’s a particular pitch which affects you rather than the overall spectrum of noise when it’s at significant volume as Flare tends to attenuate and filter some frequencies whereas Hearos and Loop are designed to do more in the way of overall volume reduction.

      There are also cheap knockoffs on AliExpress and similar sites as well as other lesser-known brands that are typically marketed to musicians and festival-goers which reduce volume while maintaining a reasonable level of fidelity.

      For home use, if you don’t give a fuck about what allistic people think, or if you are so sensitive that it’s disabling then I’d recommend considering ear defenders (i.e. industrial ear protection). If you have tinnitus note that this may not be a good option or it may only be suitable in certain situations. As a strategy to reduce your overall sensory load, you might find spending some time wearing ear defenders at home at the end of your day helps you to decompress and refresh.

      Earplugs are cheap and cheerful - they’ll definitely help but they muffle sound so you lose most of the fidelity. Good if you’re on a budget, if you want to carry a backup in your bag, or you want a lot of sound reduction but you want something more discreet than ear defenders for wearing in public.

      • “Crowding out”

      Idk what the actual psychological term for this is, if there even is one, but our nervous systems are only capable of receiving a certain amount of sensory input and this means we can kinda countersignal sensory input with other sensory input to crowd it out. (Someone with a degree help a comrade out, please!)

      This probably seems abstract but in the simplest terms it’s something that is instinctive to people because even kids will do this when they are hurt - when someone injures themselves they will put pressure or lightly rub the area that is in pain.

      In terms of auditory sensory sensitivity, the two examples I can think of are plugging your ears and humming or using headphones and playing sound through them fairly loudly.

      Exactly what noise is going to be a question of what is most tolerable to you but you might be noise music, hardcore techno, doom metal, one of those ambient heavy rain tracks, or something else. Often the best place to start though is with is colour noise, with white noise being the most commonly known example but there are different frequency ranges associated with different colours.

      Personally I find that white noise grates on my nerves pretty quickly and my favourite would have to be this particular track (disclaimer that you need decent speakers or headphones to get the value out of it because the loudspeaker on a mobile device isn’t going to cut it for the frequency ranges it hits), although that whole channel is a goldmine for different noise tracks so I’d encourage you to do your own exploration.

      • Soothing

      This dovetails into the point above because a lot of the stuff used to crowd out some sensory input is going to be soothing as well, although not always.

      You can use your downtime to listen to sounds, tracks, or songs that you find particularly soothing as a way of decompressing and finding your centre after experiencing noxious auditory stimuli. This one likewise is quite personal and it may take some exploring before you find what hits the spot for you.

      Last of all, it’s important to distinguish between what you find to be stimulating and what you find to be soothing. I know I’m conflating terms here so you’ll have to excuse me for that.

      If we imagine a spectrum that runs from the things that we find most calming and soothing to the things that we find to be most stimulating or exciting, you’ll probably be able to identify what specific type of sensory input from the different categories (olfactory, gustatory, tactile, auditory, vestibular, proprioceptive and… idk I always miss one of them lol) you find pleasurable and then it should be pretty easy to determine whether that stimuli is more soothing or more stimulating from that point.

      For example, you will probably find a range of auditory sensory stimuli to be pleasant but not all of it will be soothing so the rest are probably stimulating for you.

      There’s a discussion to be had here about how if you readily identify more on one end of the spectrum vs the other then you’re likely to be considered sensory-avoidant or sensory-seeking for that particular sense. (For example, I am [legitimately tested btw] largely sensory-avoidant with the olfactory sense and largely sensory-seeking with the gustatory sense.) Maybe one day I’ll find the motivation to purchase the Adolescent/Adult Sensory Profile kit and “democratise” it, but that day is not today.

      Anyway, I’ve rambled on for ages again. I’ll cut it off here. I hope that this helps give you some insight into how to better meet your sensory needs, especially with regards to auditory sensitivity. I should also mention that it’s worth considering reading Living Sensationally by Winnie Dunn - literally the Occupational Therapist who wrote the book on sensory profiles although that title is written for a lay audience so it doesn’t presume a level of pre-knowledge about like psychology or occupational therapy or anything.

      • Pluto [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        Holy effort-post, Batman!


        For misophonia, especially if you’re late-diagnosed or undiagnosed, it’s important to keep in mind that you probably have been taught to ignore your sensory sensitivity and to suppress it as much as possible.


        Yeah, I’ve long suspected this, tbh. I think I have his “numbness” that I mistake for not feeling anything, but it’s definitely registering. Oh, it definitely is. Yeah, my misophonia was diagnosed late, unfortunately.


        What this means is that you’re likely pushing yourself in terms of idk, I guess what I’d call your “sensory load”, before it even hits the point where it’s physically painful for you. Think of it in terms of music being too loud for a person but not to the point where it actively hurts them - this is still going to cause a person to become overwhelmed, distressed, exhausted, and to struggle with focus etc. This Is likely going to have a significant impact on your overall wellbeing as well as your experience of executive dysfunction and burnout etc.


        I push myself too much, it’s true. I push through things and I think it’s hurting me. I don’t know when to stop, quite literally. Don’t know my own limits.


        This term isn’t a value-judgment btw. Avoidance is what people engage in when they don’t go outside in the peak of the Texas summer because it’s too hot - that’s not a negative thing, it’s just plain good sense.


        What do you mean by it not being a “value-judgment”?


        In my (admittedly limited) experience, over-ear noise cancelling headphones are more effective than in-ear ones.


        Already use them, though I can’t get them to charge and enhance their capabilities. I’ll make sure to get that fixed though…

        They definitely do help, but I still feel the pain when it starts to happen…

        There are also noise-filtering devices like Hearos, Loop, and Flare Calmer. If you regularly experience pain from the day-to-day soundscape then I’d lean more towards Hearos or Loop over Flare except in situations where it’s a particular pitch which affects you rather than the overall spectrum of noise when it’s at significant volume as Flare tends to attenuate and filter some frequencies whereas Hearos and Loop are designed to do more in the way of overall volume reduction.


        I didn’t know about these, outside the noise-cancelling headphones. I’ll try them out. Thanks! And yeah, I can get them through Alibaba.com or AliExpress, I’m sure.


        Earplugs are cheap and cheerful - they’ll definitely help but they muffle sound so you lose most of the fidelity. Good if you’re on a budget, if you want to carry a backup in your bag, or you want a lot of sound reduction but you want something more discreet than ear defenders for wearing in public.


        Come to think of it, you can also pair 'em with noise-cancelling headphones. I’ll try it out!


        Idk what the actual psychological term for this is, if there even is one, but our nervous systems are only capable of receiving a certain amount of sensory input and this means we can kinda countersignal sensory input with other sensory input to crowd it out. (Someone with a degree help a comrade out, please!)


        I’ll study this a bit more, but I’ll try it out, and I think that I kinda know what it refers to in the end.

        I put a star on your comment just in case I need to review it. Thanks!

        • ReadFanon [any, any]@hexbear.net
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          8 months ago

          I push myself too much, it’s true. I push through things and I think it’s hurting me. I don’t know when to stop, quite literally. Don’t know my own limits.

          I need to make a post about autistic burnout one of these days…

          I guess my advice to you would be to take inventory of how you deal with things, especially when you’re out of your room/the house.

          One thing to consider is how overwhelmed you are.

          Sensory overload, even if it’s not at the point where a meltdown or shutdown is imminent, can make it impossibly difficult to figure out how I’m feeling internally. If that resonates with your experience some of the time/a lot of the time then it’s going to be important to engage in strategies for better accommodating your sensory needs.

          Being extremely anxious is another thing that makes it really difficult in a similar way because I’m emotionally/psychologically overwhelmed - similar experience, different cause.

          The next thing to look at is how much masking you are engaging in.

          Obviously masking takes on a lot of different aspects but one of the big indicators is whether you are suppressing stims a lot. If you are late diagnosed you it’s likely that you got trained out of a lot of your stimming behaviour at a young age, either through the conscious actions of adults around you or by your peers with bullying and ostracism, so just because you don’t feel the urge to stim doesn’t mean that you aren’t suppressing the urge to stim necessarily, it might just be an indication that you are so accustomed to suppressing your stims that it feels completely normal to you.

          Another is how much people-pleasing you are engaging in.

          People pleasing also takes on a lot of aspects and imo it’s not just when you are saying yes to people without considering whether it’s a good idea or being nice/friendly even when the situation doesn’t call for it or when you don’t feel like being that way.

          For me, I’m fairly high in regards to social masking. What that means is when I’m around other people I am running heuristics in my mind constantly to try to understand what other people are communicating, what would be the best way for me to communicate what I’m trying to, and what is most appropriate in regards to things like etiquette and the expectations of reciprocity, and all of it feels like conscious effort because it doesn’t come naturally to me.

          For example, I am reading the subtle cues that the others around me are giving such as facial expression, body language, tone, choice of words etc. I’m consciously timing how often I should break eye contact. I’m retrospectively going back over what was just said in case I might have said the wrong thing or implied something that I didn’t want to as well as trying to identify if there were any points that I am expected to inquire about or anything I’m supposed to reciprocate. And all the while I’m modulating my own choice of words, tone, body language, facial expressions etc. to try and best communicate what I’m trying to get across to others. I’m also assessing whether I’ve talked too much about something or if I’m boring others and stuff like that.

          And that’s only the most obvious things that I’m doing when I’m in high masking mode. When a person is doing all of that consciously, is it any wonder that they don’t find a moment to stop and consider how they are feeling in the moment?

          If I could liken my experience of high masking in a social sense, I’m like a skilled beginner or an intermediate at social interactions. You know when someone is learning to swim or ride a bike and they can do it, and often they do just fine, but it is kinda stiff and awkward and if they aren’t focusing on all of the things that they need to attend to then they start making mistakes? That’s how I feel when I’m socialising and meanwhile everyone around me seems to be experts who just socialise effortlessly (because a lot of the time it is actually pretty effortless for allistic people.)

          To sum all of this up, if you are regularly pushing way beyond your limits and especially if you don’t even realise it until much later on, then you are at a high risk of autistic burnout and, believe me, it’s much harder to recover from autistic burnout than it is to develop ways to accommodate your sensory needs and to work on unmasking/reducing your level of masking.

          What do you mean by it not being a “value-judgment”?

          It’s in the sense that there’s a cultural value attached to the term or there’s specific connotations associated with the term (think about the difference in connotation between saying “light skinned” and “fair skinned”; both mean the same thing but if you are using a term that also means nice, equitable, even-handed etc. the way that the word fair does then the subtle implication is that a person with a darker skin tone is not these things.)

          With regards to that specific term, avoidance is pathologised in psychology and society; avoidant attachment style, avoidant personality disorder, “You’re being avoidant again!”. The implication is that avoidance is unhealthy, cowardly, problematic, and “not an appropriate way of dealing with your problems”.

          When someone leaps out of the way of a car that’s barreling towards them, nobody would say that the person was being avoidant, even though this is true in a technical sense, because we typically only associate avoidance with the “wrong” sort of ways of doing things.

          Excellent advice about pairing earplugs with headphones btw!!

          I’ll study this a bit more, but I’ll try it out, and I think that I kinda know what it refers to in the end.

          On an auditory level, a really good example is white noise or being near a fan - idk about you but for me it’s so much harder to hear other sounds when I’m near a fan because of the noise it generates and how it kinda blurs out a lot of other sounds.

    • Wertheimer [any]@hexbear.net
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      8 months ago

      The author has misophonia. The general strategy she gives for things is have a “quick calm plan” for when you’re overwhelmed, and “sensory soothing” strategies to counteract sensory overloads. For misophonia specifically, she talks about going to movies during matinees, and preferring to meet people for meals outdoors. She also recommends “seeking out silence after your sound sense has been triggered.” Generally, her advice for sensory triggers that are inescapable is to make sure you have alone time afterward, with an opportunity to treat yourself to something that soothes that sense. (She likes smelling lavender after experiencing an unpleasant smell, for example.)

      • Pluto [he/him, he/him]@hexbear.net
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        8 months ago

        “The author has misophonia.”

        Then I immediately trust it!

        And yeah, my therapists and I have worked on “safety plans” before, though not for misophonia. Sensory soothing, eh? Could be useful. Haven’t tried that before, tbh.