MountainLaurel wrote:
Quote:
I always thought it was normal, too, until I mentioned it around a group of people and they looked at me like I was either making things up or crazy.
Maybe they looked aghast because that's how reading is for most readers. Sort of, as if you'd asked; 'What's it called when you spill water into your mouth, then force it down with your throat muscles and feel a wonderful, cool satiety? And is it a non-NT thing?'
No...LOL! That's not how it went at all. We were talking about a book and I said that the actor who played a part in the movie was the same actor who played it when I read the book and they asked me what I meant and I said "You know...how you stop reading and see the movie instead." They said they read the words, and I said "You mean, like the whole time?" because for me, I start by reading the words, and if the book is bad or uninteresting, it never changes. But if it is good and I am interested in it, I lose the words and catch the movie instead.
If I ever asked most people IRL if something was non-NT or NT, they would have no idea what I was talking about. People outside of the world of autism do not use such lingo.
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Mom to 2 exceptional atypical kids
Long BAP lineage