franknfurter wrote:
yeah its awful, how have you coped with things like exams, i do manage it but it takes 20 min to calm down enough to actually do the exam, im sure its affected my marks in some cases.
I move my lower jaw back and forth really quickly and my teeth hitting together make a clicking noise. Or I bounce my leg very fast, or slightly raise my feet of the ground and bounce them off each other. I have to do some kind of physical activity or I will burst.
I have a horrible problem at work because one person said it is "unprofessional" to listen to music in the business place (I am in a back office, no one but my coworkers are ever there), and so I can't listen to music. It effects my productivity and on days when others are in the office, I have to refrain from lashing out at them for simple things like breathing and swallowing. I feel irrationally angry at them. If I were allowed to listen to music, this would not happen because my brain could focus on that noise instead of the breathing noises.
I find myself almost wholly unable to concentrate without some kind of regular background noise. I hear every noise (cars, doors opening and closing, people walking, people typing, pencils writing, etc) with what must be exaggerated clarity and it prevents me from even keeping my thoughts organized. It's like my train of thought is interrupted by each out-of-place noise and I have to back up and start over. My frustration builds because of this and eventually I am so irritated that I can't accomplish anything.
I find exceedingly few people understand this. It can be very lonely because it seems like most people on the spectrum (and in general life) have low tolerance extraneous noise.
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Mom to 2 exceptional atypical kids
Long BAP lineage