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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 9:37 am

LOL....you can’t have been an English major at some Oxford/Cambridge-type place, and spell “Yeats” wrong (unless there is some person named “Yates” I don’t know about).

I suspect the lie is #1. You probably did excellently in imagery. You quoted Whitman a couple of days ago (or was it yesterday?)



elsapelsa
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16 Jun 2018, 9:38 am

Isabella, I quite enjoyed crytowic's recent book simply called "synesthesia" it hardly mentioned ASC though which was a surprise. It was well referenced so might also lead to other good resources. It was very well written and had a very good catalogue of different types of synesthesia which was fairly mind blowing.


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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 9:41 am

#2 for Elsa. She’s a big time annotator.

To decipher any bureaucracy takes a certain form of “genius” and a decent dose of both ambition and moral outrage.



IsabellaLinton
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16 Jun 2018, 9:42 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
LOL....you can’t have been an English major at some Oxford/Cambridge-type place, and spell “Yeats” wrong (unless there is some person named “Yates” I don’t know about).

I suspect the lie is #1. You probably did excellently in imagery. You quoted Whitman a couple of days ago (or was it yesterday?)



LOL. I think my phone autocorrected the word. Sorry :D . But yes, 2 is my lie. I'm not a big fan of YEATS. and I wouldn't be able to rank poets in order. I don't think that way.

1 is true. I didn't always have trouble because I usually sensed what I was "supposed" to write based on a traditional interpretation of the text. Whenever I explained my true response, I was penalized. I should go back and fight for those few grades LOL.

3 So true.


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elsapelsa
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16 Jun 2018, 9:44 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
#2 for Elsa. She’s a big time annotator.

To decipher any bureaucracy takes a certain form of “genius” and a decent dose of both ambition and moral outrage.


Yep, I write on everything including tube tickets that get eaten up at the end of my journey.


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IsabellaLinton
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16 Jun 2018, 9:45 am

elsapelsa wrote:
Isabella, I quite enjoyed crytowic's recent book simply called "synesthesia" it hardly mentioned ASC though which was a surprise. It was well referenced so might also lead to other good resources. It was very well written and had a very good catalogue of different types of synesthesia which was fairly mind blowing.



Thank you! I will definitely read the book and its references.


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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 9:50 am

1. I almost failed when I wrote a paper on “The Lake Isle of Innisfree,” by Yeats.

2. I aced a paper on Dostoyevsky.

3. I was enchanted with the “Nun Priest’s Tale,” by Chaucer, and I did a paper on it. I received my usual A-Minus on it.



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16 Jun 2018, 9:53 am

3 for kortie, I don't think your usual was an A-.

Bye guys. Off to watch twelth night in a rainy field with a bunch of 8 year olds. :|


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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 9:56 am

#2 is correct. Never did a paper on Dostoyevsky.

Alas, about 90% of my papers were scored an A-Minus. I could never find out what I was “missing.”



IsabellaLinton
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16 Jun 2018, 9:59 am

1 for Kortie.
That sounds out of character.

PS. I think we should invent a new poet named Master B-Yates. His rhythm is a little fast, though.


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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 10:05 am

I like sort of a Bolero-type rhythm in that sense.

#1 is true. It was my first assignment ever after not going to school for 18 years.



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16 Jun 2018, 10:07 am

1. 7th grade was where I made the greatest effort to be more extraverted. In turn it is also the point where there was a greater made to figure out what was "wrong" with me.

2. I always did poorly on my English courses.

3. The summer before 9th grade I was learning from a college algebra book.


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IsabellaLinton
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16 Jun 2018, 10:08 am

elsapelsa wrote:
3 for kortie, I don't think your usual was an A-.

Bye guys. Off to watch twelth night in a rainy field with a bunch of 8 year olds. :|



Oh my goodness. That will make for some funny memories. :) Enjoy.


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IsabellaLinton
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16 Jun 2018, 10:10 am

SentientPotato wrote:
1. 7th grade was where I made the greatest effort to be more extraverted. In turn it is also the point where there was a greater made to figure out what was "wrong" with me.

2. I always did poorly on my English courses.

3. The summer before 9th grade I was learning from a college algebra book.



1. That seems a touch late for intervention, if intervention is to be made at all.


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kraftiekortie
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16 Jun 2018, 10:12 am

#1. Perhaps this occurred in 6th grade?



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16 Jun 2018, 10:25 am

Yep, it was 6th. Can't remember when this all technically started, but it all went on until somewhere in 7th. Lack of funds meant opinions rather than actual answers, opinions that I was never made aware of until like 12 years after the fact due to it slipping out in an argument (not one I was involved in).


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Your neurodiverse (Aspie) score: 91 of 200
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