Is that where my ability to play several instruments came from? Because I have Asperger's? If that's the case, then I wouldn't give it up for anything.
I have known a lot of musicians who have to try really, really hard to play decently, and I've never met anybody who could be famous for it. I seem to have the gift of melody, and it just comes out of my fingertips. Whenever I play the piano, I draw an audience. It's been that way since I was a little kid. I'll find a piano somewhere, sit down and start playing, get lost in my own little world of music and when I stop, there is applause. I can't tell you how many times it's happened. I wandered into a dark, empty auditorium once, and sat down at the piano and played for about half an hour. When I stopped, it sounded like over a hundred people had come in while I was playing (I hadn't noticed or heard them - they must have been really quiet), and they were giving me a standing ovation! And I was just doodling, you know. Playing whatever came into my head, not giving a performance.
I recently bought a Korg M50 keyboard workstation, and my wife has said that some of the stuff I play gives her goosebumps. She has two degrees in music. I have Grade 2 of the John Thompson Piano Method.
If my Asperger's is responsible for those kinds of events happening in my life, then yeah, that makes me proud. I don't have the kind that impairs my ability to reason or function or participate in the world. I don't stim, or however you call that action. I'm not too great in the social arena, and I can't do math, and I don't drive, and I can't build or fix anything, I'm well-written though poorly-spoken, but I can play like a mother******. It's what keeps me going, because there's more music in my head that hasn't come out yet, and I want to hear it.
Thanks for explaining it that way, glider18.