Vander571 wrote:
I remember when I was about 8 or so, it was my dads birthday. He liked music (we had records back then, this was the early 80's).
I saw an album cover in the record store which I really liked. It was really colourful and pretty. I really wanted to get it for him, so I did.
I had no idea what music was on it, that part just didn't register as something I should consider.
Well turns out he did'nt like any of the music, in fact it was completely the wrong genre.
You see, I bought it because I liked how it looked, i was fixated on the pretty cover, to me, that was so much more important.
This is the earliest I can remember of this sort of fixation. It appears to have been the main theme throughout my life and has caused a lot of dysfunction and problems.
Is this Autistic fixations?
I suppose it could be described as that - getting too focussed on the visual presentation and forgetting about the content. And I guess that might come into the realm of "not seeing the bigger picture."
With me it would be the other way round, i.e. I'd ignore the presentation and focus entirely on the music, which is apparently unusual considering how much visual presentation the record industry adds to sound recordings. I'm happy with an mp3 as long as the bitrate isn't so low that it noticeably lowers the sound quality.
But I often get stuck in the details of things. If it occurs to me, I don't usually have a lot of difficulty in "stepping back" to see the big picture, but it doesn't always occur to me, so I'll work away perfecting a tiny detail and then later realise that I could have put that time to better use if I'd taken a look at the overview and planned the project accordingly. My habit is to complete the one detail first, then move onto some other detail nearby, and so on till it's done.