Quote:
Would you rather be NT for a day or accept a one-time payment of $500?
I'd take the $500 so that I can get a family member something that they had been wanting for Christmas for years.
Quote:
How would you make use of a button that could control the sensitivity of your senses?
First, I would have to know a good bit about the button, its mechanics, and its potential sides effects before I would be willing to use it. Would the changes be temporary, or would they be permanent? Does the use of the button have any secondary effects, such as sensory crossing or decrease in processing abilities due to/somehow related to the decrease in sensitivity levels? How, exactly, does such a button work; does it mess with the physical configuration of my brain somehow? Does it alter neural pathways? Does it alter chemical pathways? What effects do these alterations have?
See, this is why I always say "no" to those hypothetical "Would you take a magic pill/cure?" questions.
Though, to answer the implied question of which sensory sensitivities I would like to change, I wouldn't mind reducing my sensitivity to noise just enough to allow me to attend musical concerts without going into complete sensory meltdown or to attend events with large numbers of people, such as parades, Renaissance festivals/anime conventions, and large, multi-vender holiday "flea markets" without going into sensory fatigue. I also wouldn't mind reducing my sensitivity to sunlight during the sunnier days; all this being said, though, my sensory sensitivities are at a mild enough level that I do not feel compelled to use drastic means to alter them.
Quote:
In your own world, are you an unstoppable badass?
In my elaborate inner fantasy life, yes (well, perhaps not
literally unstoppable, but my fantasy self-insert comes pretty close).
In my waking life, not even close.
Quote:
Do you like to post on WrongPlanet?
I do, although I don't do such terribly often due to not having much to say on many topics and due to generally being more of a reader/observer than a conversationalist.
_________________
I am not a textbook case of any particular disorder; I am an abstract, poetic portrayal of neurovariance with which much artistic license was taken.