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emtyeye
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10 Oct 2011, 9:47 pm

I have big time auditory/sensory synesthesia: every sound registers as both an auditiory experience and a sensation, especially if I am relaxed. I'm not talking about really loud sounds like a car stereo playing at full volumne and base at the traffic light. I mean if I am sitting or lying on the couch and someone is washing dishes or turning pages in a book in the next room, it produces a sensation in my body. The sensation is always different and can be any where in my body. It can be mildly pleasant or sort of unpleasant or just there. Is this common with AS?



AardvarkGoodSwimmer
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10 Oct 2011, 11:50 pm

emtyeye wrote:
. . . I mean if I am sitting or lying on the couch and someone is washing dishes or turning pages in a book in the next room, it produces a sensation in my body. The sensation is always different and can be any where in my body. It can be mildly pleasant or sort of unpleasant or just there. Is this common with AS?

Mine's a little different, but I like how you explain it. For me, maybe a low-key feeling? (not sure I have synesthesia, but think I do)



izzeme
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11 Oct 2011, 3:49 am

not really how i experience sound, mostly it's just a distracting sound to me.
i do, however, feel physical pain on off-key music or very high tones, usually the things that noone else even hears.
also, music can trigger very powerful emotions in me, stronger then anything real life can throw at me.



Griffen
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11 Oct 2011, 4:54 am

I have a bad migraine issue, so my head is always a little more brittle than other parts.

Always feels like I have a long piano-chord in my head and runs down my neck and into to my "innards". Unexpected sounds, high pitch sounds or some electronic component sounds set it off and it feels like a god awful vibration going off inside me.


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MMonjeJr
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11 Oct 2011, 11:26 am

Quote:
I have big time auditory/sensory synesthesia: every sound registers as both an auditiory experience and a sensation, especially if I am relaxed. I'm not talking about really loud sounds like a car stereo playing at full volumne and base at the traffic light. I mean if I am sitting or lying on the couch and someone is washing dishes or turning pages in a book in the next room, it produces a sensation in my body.


Yes, yes, all of this, yes.

I have a distinct bend toward highly rhythmic music (not just electronica--all rhythm-centered music) that stems from this, because really polyrhythmic music can feel like a massage session. Similarly, sounds that are static and prolonged can get to feel itchy, and chaotic noises/unorganized sounds can be painful, even to the point of driving me away from an area. Sometimes I'm feeling this more intensely than at other times, and I have no idea why, but I'm always feeling it to some degree.

I do have to say that while there's variety in how intense the sensation is, I have a level of consistency when it comes to what the sensation is. String melodies always feel like broad strokes across the body, electronic whine from appliances always feels like a fingernail in my ear canal, etc., just to different levels of intensity and/or in different locations for some sensations.