MemberSix wrote:
How does it affect the gait ?
It must slow it down a lot.
It must also be absolutely knackering over any distance.
Doesn't it attract a lot of comment ?
I saw it on the 'Aspie Quiz' and wondered about it. Yet another little aspie-trait that I share and had no idea was associated with anything but my own personal oddness.
I have done it since I was a small child. People have often commented on it. When I was in Junior High and High School it was a favorite focus of teasing -- the gang of kids who best liked to give me a hard time would mock this gait in an exaggerated way whenever they passed me in the halls. Eight kids all doing it to an extreme while walking together in a pack look pretty funny, though being laughed at didn't please me. I tried to reduce it, or at least smooth it out so I don't bounce along, and managed that to some degree, but I'm still walking on the balls of my feet.
Some people like it. My HS girlfriend said it's what attracted her, in fact, this 'spring in my step' made me seem vibrant and happy to her, she was dissapointed to eventually uncover the essential melancholy of my character. Another girl wrote a poem about me 'tip-toeing' around her house. My grandfather also enjoyed it.
It doesn't slow me down. I walk about as fast, or faster, as other people of my height. It is not tiring, either, though perhaps it would be if I hadn't been doing it more or less all my life. It's given me musculature in my calves that's not really proportionate to the rest of me. It wears out the soles of shoes in an uneven way.