Why do you stim?
I have some weird ones, including clicking my ears (adjusting the pressure in ears), grabbing my crotch, and beatboxing. Sometimes I don't realize I am grabbing my crotch and that can be embarrassing... I used to get scolded for that as a kid. My wife can tell when I am happy or excited based on the tempo of my beatboxing, haha. Sometimes I do some rhythm speaking. The most recent one is "boxes, packages, boxes, packages, boxes packages, boxes and packages." Actually, most of my "stimming" behaviors are verbal or mental, but sometimes I spin around in chairs and tap on things.
A lot of times I guess it's my way of expressing emotions. Other times, it's simply to entertain myself because I am bored, but if I am in public, I am extremely conscious of the behaviors and I try to keep them under control.
Super interesting thread. I'm on the parenting forum mostly for my son's recent diagnosis. But I do some stimming I think. I'm supposedly NT. What do you think it means? You've probably all had this conversation before... I have no clue why I do any of this. I guess mostly I'm often bored.
So, I rock all the time. Standing, sitting, well not when laying down I guess. I'm 46 and I've done it since I was a little kid. My parents were quite worried in fact. In the car I learned to bounce up and down instead of rock back and forth because my father would say that rocking back and forth was ruining his gas mileage! When I drive I bounce my left leg up and down.
I do weird breathing pattern things, like breathing in for the count of two then holding for a one count then out, almost like making a little melody out of it. Anybody else do that? I have no clue why and I don't feel great when I'm doing them. When I notice and stop and take a deep breath I feel better, and I feel like why in the heck was I doing that? I also have started breathing I guess you could call it sort of roughly so that it feels tight and raspy. I notice that and stop and I feel better. No idea why I do it if I apparently like not doing it better than doing it.
I'm always chewing on my lip. Not to the point of hurting it but if I mess with the outside part too much they get really chapped. I try to mess with the inside part to avoid chapping.
I sometimes do visual stuff involving lining up things in my visual field that are actually in different areas, like a pencil close to me with the edge of a painting on the wall farther away. My son does this sort of thing a lot which is what made me realize I do it a bit too.
And I don't know if this is stimming but I get phrases stuck in my head and they repeat and repeat and repeat. I don't verbalize them though unless it's a song lyric.
I really really like doing multiple things at once, such as reading while playing a board game or having a conversation, or working on the computer while focusing on a movie. Not just busy work but actual work and actual focus. I do have times when I decide to rest and I'm good at just chilling out and resting. But wanting to do a lot of stuff at once is I guess a form of sensation seeking, so maybe that's why I do the behaviors that might be called stimming. I have very little anxiety and I'm always praised for my calmness and rationality by people who have the opportunity to notice. So I don't think any of these behaviors are done for emotional stress. I can stop them if I want to, any time, and I don't feel any different or anxious or like I have to continue doing them or anything. So maybe because of that feature they are not like stimming at all.
I hadn't realised that I stimmed until now (as I didn't know what it was) but looking back I can see I have had several, when really young I had a toy rabbit with a ribbon, I would fold the ribbon to a point and scratch my top lip, or fold it in half with the smoothest side up and rub it on my top lip, I think it was a comfort thing to get to sleep. When I was a bit older I used to put my finger in my belly button, people noticed and commented on this, when I was 18 I got it pierced and then I liked to play with the piercing. Since having my kids and taking that out I don't do that, but I have my tongue pierced and I like moving it on the top of my mouth. I do it because it feels nice.
Stims I do when stressed are humming and when a few really bad things have happened that I can't comprehend I have rocked. I think it's a way of focusing in a stressful situation. The last time I remember doing it was when my partner left me and the kids, there was just so many things to think about and as far as I was concerned it was right out of the blue (though now I know about the AS maybe it wasn't) I couldn't focus on what was happening and the emotions were so intense I felt as though they were warping the air in the room and I couldn't concentrate. Humming and rocking blocked out the distracting things and helps me focus.
Oh and I have a visual stim when I stare at something as though I am focusing on something, but I'm actually trying to unfocus my eyes (if that makes sense?) I usually do this when I'm talking to people and they are boring me, I think it might be so I focus more on what they are saying because I'm having trouble concentrating on their words. I sometimes do it for fun too.
<--- Has nerves like egg shells so stimming calms him down.
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Rocking back and forwards is my most common stim and I do it almost every waking moment. Usually I can't resist, and rarely do I want to. These are some of the reasons that I stim. It is hard to explain exactly why, but I will make an attempt.
-My thoughts are always racing, and it feels somehow wrong for my body to be still
-My stimming is a form of communication, particularly when I am unable to talk
-If I am rocking I have better concentration because I am focusing on what I am doing instead of wasting energy trying to prevent what is natural to me
-I am often thrown into panic by my surroundings and sensory overload, but if I am rocking steadily I have a little more control of myself and I am less likely to experience a meltdown or a shutdown. Rocking calms me and distances me from my surroundings. Sometimes i feel like if I stayed still everything would overwhelm me; like if I stopped moving, I might never start again. There are times when I am still, but they are only when I am very relaxed and feel completely at peace
-It gets rid of excess energy and is an outlet for intense emotion
It is hard to explain right now. I am having trouble with articulation.
I should add that my stimming is increased by emotional state. When i am excited or particularly stressed or anxious it may become more pronounced or I may use multiple stims.
btbnnyr, these bunny emoticons are wonderful.
I twitch and flap my hands, twist my tongue, and pace. Those are my stims. These are my reasons...
#1 I am excited and it's overwhelming and sends a sensation through my body-excess energy-that I have to release.
#2 When my brain is being stimulated by things like typing, listening to music, watching a really good show, etc. which-again-causes excess energy.
#4 Caffeine-purely causes the excess energy thing.
#5 Cause it feels good.
#6 I have better concentration and focus of the thoughts.
Oh and I just realized I twitch my arms too.
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