When did you first become aware that you were different?
When I was in preschool, I did not interact with the other children unless approached. I was perfectly content to play by myself. However, I do not remember noticing that this made me different from the other children.
When I began school at the age of 6, I began to notice things. The other children played together. I played alone. The other children would approach each other to play. I didn't speak to anyone unless they approached me. The other children spoke a foreign language that seemed to be in some way tied in with their games and the way they played with each other. I spoke my own language that I learned from the books that I'd been reading for the past 3+ years.
I noticed these differences, but I didn't see them as a problem. Everyone is different, after all. I thought that they were the sort of children who talked all the time and played with each other, and I was the sort who... read books and spent her lunchtimes walking around the edges of the playground. I was content. I was not lonely. The only thing I would have changed would have been to stop the other children from bullying me.
Sometime through high school, my attitude changed. My uninterest in social chit-chat, parties and so forth changed to fear, and I developed full-blown social phobia. This wasn't helped by my sensory sensitivities and hatred of small talk, which led me to become both bored and exhausted by social situations. (It still does, to a great extent.)
Now, I am returning more to the attitude of my six-year-old self. Social interactions no longer terrify me. They can make me nervous, but not so much that it is detrimental to the quality of my life. They still don't interest me too much, but that doesn't bother me like it once did,
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Music Theory 101: Cadences.
Authentic cadence: V-I
Plagal cadence: IV-I
Deceptive cadence: V- ANYTHING BUT I ! !! !
Beethoven cadence: V-I-V-I-V-V-V-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I
-I-I-I-I-I-I-I-I! I! I! I I I