timf wrote:
I think that as an adult one is almost backed into a corner to learn better management skills regarding focus.
i use the comparison of learning to drive. If one only looks at the speedometer, an accident is likely. As a result, one has to interrupt one's focus to make peripheral scans periodically. This tends to force a person to take "manual control" of focus (to some degree).
Some truth in that, I think. As adults we're usually less protected than children, and more often have to manage multiple hazards. Indulge in the Aspie habit of focussing on one thing too long and hard, at the expense of all else, and you can die. So we have to learn to merely glance at things, which is essential for safe driving.