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Trontine
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09 Jan 2014, 7:09 pm

Anyone else here has really poor imagination? Even as a child I had a poor imagination. I remember I had a toy stove, I couldn't very well have a real stove as a child, but I wanted it to be real tea in my kettle, or else it wasn't fun. Pretending wasn't fun. I wanted it to be as real as possible. I never really got the hang of Barbie's. Their size weren't really realistic. Dolls were better. I always wanted a Baby Born doll, because those could eat and pee.

I'm not really fond of fiction either, because it's something I can't relate to. There has to at least be a connection to the real world. As with Harry Potter for instance; it's about wizardry, so not exactly realistic, but at least they live in a world where wizardry isn't considered normal, whereas in The Lord of the Rings; elves, hobbits, dwarfs and all that stuff is normal.



AdamAutistic
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09 Jan 2014, 8:18 pm

when i played with toys as a little boy, i was always copying my favorite video games with them. i wasn't really thinking of the adventures myself; the adventures were always based off a game.

my imagination now is just fantasies of things i wish could happen. nothing unrealistic though.


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loner1984
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09 Jan 2014, 8:42 pm

Always did and still have problem imagining things or visualizing them in my mind.

My favorite thing to play when i was a kid before computer, was with tiny machines, like digging machines, dump trucks, then i would make roads, dig holes, make cities and stuff, instead of thinking about stuff, just doing it, and see where and how it went.

Its still a problem today when i wanna build stuff, i cant visualize how it is, thus i always make stuff to big for some reason.



Last edited by loner1984 on 09 Jan 2014, 10:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Trontine
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09 Jan 2014, 9:11 pm

loner1984 wrote:
Always did and still have problem imagining things or visualizing them in my mind.

My favorite thing to play when i was a kid before computer, was with tiny machines, like digging machines, dumb trucks, then i would make roads, dig holes, make cities and stuff, instead of thinking about stuff, just doing it, and see where and how it went.

Its still a problem today when i wanna build stuff, i cant visualize how it is, thus i always make stuff to big for some reason.


I'm also terrible at visualizing. For instance, if I'm drawing, I need something to draw from, because I can't picture things in my mind.



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10 Jan 2014, 6:03 am

I didn't do much with toys either.
I mostly just stimmed with them by spinning wheels or moving parts back and forth.



micfranklin
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10 Jan 2014, 8:12 am

There was a book I read back in 3rd grade and I copied a lot of imaginative ideas I've had from it since then. Not to mention various video games and life scenarios.



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10 Jan 2014, 12:32 pm

I go the opposite way, having a surplus of imagination and visualizing things.



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10 Jan 2014, 1:13 pm

Had a vivid, rich imagination as a child (obsessed with stories), but it all went away as I grew up. Now I can't even visualise anything any more.



Jacoby
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10 Jan 2014, 1:20 pm

I think I've always been a very imaginative person, maybe not one that can be molded by others tho. As a child, I was kind of in my own world and blazed my own trail.



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10 Jan 2014, 1:32 pm

One time when I was in Grade 8, my science teacher gave us an assignment to do. We were supposed to write an essay about a made up planet, the weather and air conditions and how we thought we'd look. I wrote that I would live on Millmack, eat cats and spend time writing a book titled '101 Ways To Kill a Cat' by Alf. I also composed a coloured sketch of Alf. My mum said, "I want to take a look at your completed assignment." She told me to start over and use my imagination and that my assignment looked like something that a seven year old would come up with.

I did the same assignment over again making up a different planet where humanized Beetles would spend their day listening to The Beatles.


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Quantum
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10 Jan 2014, 1:43 pm

Everytime I try to imagine things the pictures I get in my head are "weak" (They are not very visible) and details keep on getting removed if I try to rotate in my head. Is that a sign of weak imagination?



Trontine
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10 Jan 2014, 2:25 pm

Quantum wrote:
Everytime I try to imagine things the pictures I get in my head are "weak" (They are not very visible) and details keep on getting removed if I try to rotate in my head. Is that a sign of weak imagination?


I think it is. That's how it is in my head too. It's just a blur, like I have some ideas that I can't put together.



JSBACHlover
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10 Jan 2014, 3:11 pm

I can't see pictures in my head either - just flashes of details of things. Even what I see with my eyes is fragmented and put together.

I don't think Aspies have much originality. We are good at following patterns and solving problems.



superluminary
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10 Jan 2014, 4:06 pm

JSBACHlover wrote:
I can't see pictures in my head either - just flashes of details of things. Even what I see with my eyes is fragmented and put together.

I don't think Aspies have much originality. We are good at following patterns and solving problems.


When I was in art school my teacher said "There are no original ideas", then he challenged us to come up with one. No one could, it was all just a bit of this, and a bit of that mixed together. I think that's what creativity is, taking little bits of stuff and bolting them together in a different order. That's easy to do, it's practically mechanical.



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10 Jan 2014, 4:34 pm

superluminary wrote:
JSBACHlover wrote:
I can't see pictures in my head either - just flashes of details of things. Even what I see with my eyes is fragmented and put together.

I don't think Aspies have much originality. We are good at following patterns and solving problems.


When I was in art school my teacher said "There are no original ideas", then he challenged us to come up with one. No one could, it was all just a bit of this, and a bit of that mixed together. I think that's what creativity is, taking little bits of stuff and bolting them together in a different order. That's easy to do, it's practically mechanical.


George Carlin said 'Art was nailing two things together that had never been nailed together before'. :lol:



IntellectualCat
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10 Jan 2014, 7:44 pm

JSBACHlover wrote:
I can't see pictures in my head either - just flashes of details of things. Even what I see with my eyes is fragmented and put together.

I don't think Aspies have much originality. We are good at following patterns and solving problems.


Actually, for me, seeing patterns helps me come up with creative ideas, though I don't think that's the only thing that makes me creative.