As far as I am concerned, non autostic people are deffective. It must be so tiresome to always focus on 200 people's emotional state and opinions about each other. Then to focus on deforming each sentence to sound the correct way, even if it sacrefices the original message.
How could they even get through primary school with such a cognitive load is a mystery, but somehow, I don't even want to know.
@Jackuu
Yeah, I get it. I didn't even try getting a driver's license for that exact reason.
Can you immagine, that we had a teacher saying jokes during a university finals?
As I said, I know about this issue. But I still see it as a good trade.
@Boomerman @Jackuu
Driving is the worst example.
It requires you to actively observe your environment, while still filtering only for pre-determined details, and keep in mind a vehicle state as well as traffic rules. At ALL TIMES WITHOUT A PAUSE.
While the "driving" will soon get integrated, the observation goals are just contradictory. If you go hunting expecting a deer, and you see a bear, should your brain not react simply because it isn't what you were looking for?
@LukeAlmighty it’s selectively useful but can be a liability when focus is required with a lot of excess noise in the environment.
My autismal cousin is completely incapable of driving because he just can’t filter out the irrelevant shit and focus on not crashing into shit in front of him. No you don’t have to stare at and read every single street sign that you pass, no you don’t have to count every single car around you, no you don’t have to maintain exact distance between vehicles on all sides at all times
As far as I’m concerned driving is a very fluid and organic process but to him it’s this insurmountable avalanche of steps and tasks and inputs that he just doesn’t have the ability to parse properly. He can figure out all sorts of weird little minutae but for the most part he’s crippled by this