Discovery 2 - Let's talk about communication

(This thread follows on from Discovery 1 - Realisation)

I am verbally fluent with a wide vocabulary and excellent written language skills. I don't take everything literally. I understand humour, irony, metaphors. My grammar skills and reading comprehension have always been excellent. I understand that other people have unique thoughts and ideas. I can "do" eye contact. I have taught English as a second language.

Does that sound autistic? Or neurotypical?   

The following information about NT communication is from the book "A Field guide to Earthlings" by Ian Ford:-

NT communication is made up of: 

- Chemistry

- Body Language

- Facial expressions

- Words used to convey identity or feelings

- Words used to convey information

It is said that 80% of communication is non verbal.

The primary (underlying, not literal) messages in an NT conversation could be "we are in the same group", "we are in different groups" or " I am higher (or lower) than you in our group ". These messages reinforce one's identity as a member of a group and create bonding between people who share a group identity.

During small talk, people try to find out the identity of others, without 'taking a stand' or being controversial. Small talk is not pointless, it is active discovery.

There is little calculated thought when NT communication is fast & fluid.

NTs may make inferences based on internal associations. The World Wildlife fund logo is a panda. If you tell one of their representatives "I don't like pandas" they may infer you don't like the world wildlife fund.

The difficulties I experience include:

Sometimes speaking too loudly or too fast

Delivering monologues about a favourite topic

Having difficulty interpreting lies, deception & mischief

Sometimes being interpreted as being too blunt or insensitive

Sometimes being unsure whether others have meant to be rude or unkind to me

Having to plan what to say and then replaying it over and over in my head afterwards

Difficulty understanding a verbal message if stressed or upset

Can be distracted  by associations cued by dialogue with others.

The above problems are all autistic problems, which I used to think were caused by me being too sensitive, or other people being unkind. I also  thought I was ok at small talk (even though  I can find it a bit boring) but now I see that my small talk is just a habit to  fit in, and that I try to choose subjects which are a bit of interest to me. Luckily I am quite interested in the weather!

Parents
  • OH. MY. GOD

    Exactly! When all you hear is "Autism = difficulty communicating" it can be hard to reconcile that with all the stuff you said about vocabulary, fluency etc. and for me the fact that my job is basically communicating (Business Analyst, so divining 'needs' from stated 'wants', reverse-engineering requirements from presented solutions, putting stuff in 'dev' terms so they build what the business people want - I must be an amazing communicator surely!?).

    But it's all that other non-verbal implied, inferred stuff like when "Do you like this dress?" actually means "I don't really like this dress, please confirm that I'm correct" but could equally mean "I LOVE this dress! You are required to affirm this whether you agree or not"

    I thought today that maybe that's why I (and other people with ASD?) prefer written communication - it levels the playing field 'cos no-one gets the benefit of non-verbal cues... or if they do they have to be explicit e.g. emoji

    Text-based communication with emoji is probably the greatest advancement to successful NT<>ND communication ever!

Reply
  • OH. MY. GOD

    Exactly! When all you hear is "Autism = difficulty communicating" it can be hard to reconcile that with all the stuff you said about vocabulary, fluency etc. and for me the fact that my job is basically communicating (Business Analyst, so divining 'needs' from stated 'wants', reverse-engineering requirements from presented solutions, putting stuff in 'dev' terms so they build what the business people want - I must be an amazing communicator surely!?).

    But it's all that other non-verbal implied, inferred stuff like when "Do you like this dress?" actually means "I don't really like this dress, please confirm that I'm correct" but could equally mean "I LOVE this dress! You are required to affirm this whether you agree or not"

    I thought today that maybe that's why I (and other people with ASD?) prefer written communication - it levels the playing field 'cos no-one gets the benefit of non-verbal cues... or if they do they have to be explicit e.g. emoji

    Text-based communication with emoji is probably the greatest advancement to successful NT<>ND communication ever!

Children