Snivy wrote:
High Pitch noises, screaming babies, screaming children, fire drills, fire alarms, noisy kids chattering in the cafeteria, refusing to keep their voices down, drills. It's earsplitting to me and not them. It ANNOYS me that other people claim that it's not loud, when it's very loud to me.
When will people understand?
Good question...unfortunately I don't have an answer. I despise loud sounds myself, so I understand where you are coming from. Had the misfortune of shopping at an electronic store over the weekend. Seems like those who love loud sounds blast anything they can, & then leave the area with speakers maxed out at top volume.

Had to personally seek out & turn down the offending noises. It's so not cool.
I also work with a kid who plays music on his iPhone (with earbuds in place) so loud that I can hear the hissing coming from his ears. Now our office is not a quiet place. There's music playing on the radio, people talking to each other (sometimes from across the room), phones ringing, my headset beeping in my ear with the most annoying tone, etc. Now if I can hear hissing coming out of my co-workers earbuds, it's too loud. Personally, if he wants to go deaf that's on him, but I cannot handle any extra noise especially something that is just as irritating to me as my headset. It's all I can do to keep from bolting out the door or have a meltdown. I also don't care if he is offended because I can hear his noise, & tell him to turn it down. He can't seem to understand that I can hear hissing from across the room.

My best advice is to clutch your ears/head with the best grimace you can make.
_________________
If I do something right, no one remembers. If I do something
wrong, no one forgets.
Aspie Score: 173/200, NT score 31/200: very likely an Aspie
5/18/11: New Aspie test: 72/72
DX: Anxiety plus ADHD/Aspergers: inconclusive