C2V wrote:
I seem to have two settings - speak directly or shut up. I also tend to be quite clear.
I was curious if this is the same with other autistics. Listening to someone speak in a group this week I noted a difference - they tended to waffle in a long-winded way, straying from the topic often, and at least half of the words used seemed to be "filler" words - um, er, like, so, you know, just, really, etc.
This person of course may have had any number of reasons for speaking in this fashion, whether they were nervous or uncertain of themselves, or it was an affectation of a particular social identity (they happened to be young, queer and "alternative") but they did this to such an extent that I began to lose track of what they were actually talking about. Once I noticed it to the extreme in this person, I watched for it in different people in the group, and did find it to a lesser degree. It didn't distract me from following their conversation, but was present nonetheless.
Me, however, I noted it wasn't there. I stated what I needed to in order to communicate the information, and that was it. Does speaking directly relate to autism or just me?
I believe most autistics to be more honest and direct. Laconic.