Elgee wrote:
MoeTrashPanda wrote:
At work and in public I am definitely a covert stimmer, unless I am in distress. I subtly do a lot of rubbing my hair, rubbing my pants, rubbing my fingers together, touching my lips, picking my skin and nails, tapping surfaces, using fidget spinners, etc.
At home I am absolutely very vocal and visible in my stimming (making repetitive mouth noises, echolalia, repeating song lyrics, repeating memes, high pitched noises, rocking back and forth, etc.). I also feel a lot more comfortable being what we call "feral" at home.
I'm interested in the echolalia. I know a "mid-functioning" man who has this, and it's adorable when he does it (I have a crush on him but am not able to access him; let's leave it at that).
But what compels you, as a higher-functioning autistic, to have echolalia? Of course, this can vary. The man would repeat what my GPS navigator said; would repeat what someone nearby said.
I don't necessarily think I choose to have echolalia/am compelled to, but I can say that it occurs for me mainly at home or with people I'm comfortable with. I have many memories of repeating the same words over and over again, or repeating things that scratch my brain right (hearing something that catches my ear on the radio, on TV, a video I'm watching, a chorus, a line my partner is singing/saying/repeating, etc.).
I'd say it's less extreme for me as someone with "higher functioning" autism. I can control the impulse to repeat a phrase or something I hear when I am masking. Though at work I repeat phrases to get them to stick into my brain sometimes. ฅ՞•ﻌ•՞ฅ
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With feral regards,
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