PerfectlyDarkTails wrote:
So anyone else find fiction difficult to follow, create, or have zero creativity?[/color][/size][/b]
I don't have problems like that for the very fact that I "picture" it all in my head. That is however why more complicated non-fictional texts with abstract concepts that cannot be visualised concretely but need to be descried by abstract language confuse me.
Figurative language is sort of "abstract" I guess, but... well, it is
figurative, the metaphorical meaning is based on something pretty concrete if someone were to ask me. I can usually work it out because my mind translates it all into visuals or smells or whatever.
With a lot of (simple?) abstract test, I read them slowly, trying to take the information in and still come back blank. Given my IQ and ability to talk, texts like that shouldn't give me so much trouble (or so I was told) but they do because of the abstract language used for which there doesn't seem to be a way to put it in pictures or video sounds or another sensation.
Interesting enough, both can be results of having an ASD - a difficulty to visualise or specifically translate words into visuals (or an equivalent) as well as the difficulty to understand abstract concepts that cannot be translated into concrete examples.
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Autism + ADHD
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett