mr_bigmouth_502 wrote:
In particular, when I'm talking to someone, I can't be talking to someone else at the same time, at least not if they aren't part of the same conversation. I am simply unable to keep up with two different conversations at once.
My mother was one of five sisters (and six brothers, but for this example they don't count), and a normal activity for them was sitting around the kitchen table with their cups of coffee, and catching up with what was going on in their own lives, and for that matter, the lives of the rest of the community (aka "gossip" in that sense, though they were never mean about it: they just wanted to know everything that was happening-- they were concerned). My father marveled at this, when it was happening at our house: "Everybody talks all at once, and when they've finished, every one of them knows what all the others have said!" He didn't understand that, and even though I grew up with it, I didn't either. I have no suspicion that any of them was Aspie-- I suspect that my Asperger's came from my father's side, and I do indeed have one diagnosed cousin on his side, while Dad seemed to have some Aspie characteristics, like a limited version of lightning calculation, being able to count cards in a game (I didn't get that), and being happy at home rather than wanting to go out and socialize (though he did all right at work, or when he was "socializing" for good reason.
Anyway, when I'm "multitasking", which I can do to a limited extent, I'm doing as someone else said here, "one thing at a time, and rapidly alternating". I'm not running two tracks parallel in my brain. When I'm operating on a Special Interest, or really concentrating on something, any other task destroys my concentration and I hate it: I'm somewhere else entirely.
I do have trouble with names (and faces, recognizing or reading them--but I'll know "who they are" when reminded--can remember a lot about the person, and near-verbatim conversations from years ago).
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Asperges me, Domine