FluttercordAspie93 wrote:
Gotta love that stereotyping, although I can't say that
all of these are bad...
And, seriously? Dolphins?
Just, what?
Dolphins as therapy animals mostly, that's what. But after I waded through a few pages of "autistic children swimming with dolphins as therapy" links, things got a little weird. There was this:
http://www.2-b-well.org/autism-treatmen ... -dolphins/Quote:
Researchers are finding out that dolphins and autistic children communicate in much the same way.
The brain of a child with autism cannot ground to its physical body so the child cannot complete the circuit back into our reality. This disconnect from the physical body forces the brain to start running out of control and move into what is known as “hyper-drive.” In hyper-drive the brain of a child with autism begins to process at genius levels. In fact there is a term for this called “intuitive genius.” Albert Einstein was known to have had autistic-like symptoms thus possessing this intuitive genius. His education didn’t really give him the ability to come up with e=mc2 but his intuitive genius allowed him to connect to the possibilities of the idea.
Dolphins also seem to possess this ability to mentally process at genius levels. We humans vibrate between 13 and 30 cyles of brain wave energy in our conscious state. Dolphins vibrate between 250,000 and 2 trillion cycles per second of brain wave energy in their conscious state. And some where in between the mental vibrations of humans and dolphins lies the intuitive genius of a child with autism.
At this level of mental processing dolphins and children with autism can pierce time and space and communicate through what is known as “thought transference.” They literally can read the energy coming off a person and respond within a split second. Children with autism don’t really need our language. It too cumbersome. They trip over it. It dummies down their ability to process a genius levels
Anybody here retain the ability to pierce time and space into adulthood or was that strictly a childhood thing.