Are our obsessions personally meaningful?

A tendency to obsess is, apparently, a feature of autism; but have you ever wondered if the subject, nature and intensity of our obsessions are peculiar to our essential selves, as opposed to our autistic selves? Or is there no separation between those selves at all?

There's likely no such person as a 'perfect autist' (in terms of matching every standard trait or behaviour) and many of us, no doubt, have thought while reading of classic symptoms:  'Well, I don't do that' or 'That doesn't really apply to me' almost as often as we've recognised 'red flags'...so can it be true that we have no other perspective than an autistic one? Are we, essentially, hostage to our own limited outlook (as neurotypicals are hostage to theirs)? I'm not convinced that is so, while being aware that even my view on this matter might well be restricted or skewed by autism. Irony is one of the few things I 'get'.

Take my interest in history. My obsessions/deeper interests are a loop, of sorts; something that might be telling in a number of ways. But, whether I'm aware of it or not at the time, my fascination with the Tudor era or the fate of the Romanovs or the ancient Roman Republic is always rooted in the contemplation of mortality - not the historical people or periods but the nagging questions: are their, and our, lives significant or meaningless? Is the past real or merely something I imagine? And most crucially: am I, and those I care for, really mortal?

It's always there, in the background of practically anything I think deeply about - I was so 'slow' that I was not young when I first realised people die, and I've never recovered from that crisis of realisation. I've always had difficulty in accepting it as truth, though this might just be denial on my part. It's a kind of immaturity. But while this obsession - which, curiously, does not make me a pessimistic person - so often subconsciously dominates my interests from the shadows, is it simply a result of autism or do I - we - have a mind outside of that perspective?

Is obsessiveness, or the need to obsess, being misinterpreted? And why are there always *negative* assumptions about the habit? In a tv interview, one prominent autism researcher was so crass and carelessly foolish as to link autistic obsession with the horrific deeds of the Columbine killers. That kind of glib irresponsibility won't aid or encourage the general public in their understanding of autism and autistic people.  It seems convenient that a tendency to obsess should be assigned to autists, as if this tendency were completely alien to so-called normal, 'nice' people. Maybe obsessiveness is both personal and universal, and apart from being neatly boxed as 'typical autistic behaviour'.

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  • I dont think NT people will ever understand autistic obsessions or special interests. To them it just seems wierd to to be so intensley interested in one thing but then their brains arent wired like ours. To link it to things like Columbine I think is disgusting and just shows how utterley ignorant of autism some of these so called NT experts are

    As for if our obsessions or special interests are related to us personally, I think they are. I think they are related to things we are already feeling in our own lives. Like for instance, my special interest is Germany and for me a lot of that stems from how out of place I feel in the society I live in and the fact that the more ordered, less self concious,  straightforward sort of culture I see in Germany makes sense to me and feels like somewhere I can feel safe and identify with. One of my other special interests has always been cricket and similarly, the different numbers and statistics as well as the certainty of knowing every time the bowler will come into bowl and the same thing will happen is comforting to my autism. My other one is history and that is partly because I am scared of change and the uncertainty of the future wheras history is comforting because everything in it has already happend.

    So I think our special interests are related to us and our autism but like you say every autistic person is different so we are all drawn to different special interests. 



  • To link it to things like Columbine I think is disgusting and just shows how utterley ignorant of autism some of these so called NT experts are

    I %100 concur with this statement.


    TBH I also smh at the unmittigated gall of NTs use of language towards us, when they have a special interest they call it being a geek or career goals, when we have one it's an "obsession". Rolling eyes  Obsession implies that it is unhealthy, but it isn't unhealthy to enjoy things and be dedicated to something you have passion for. The amount of time I hear NTs talk about how their job sucks or what they heard on the news, you'd think now that is an obsession and unhealthy because it's always about stuff that makes them miserable. I'll take a fellow autist "banging on" about something that brings them joy for hours on end over chatting to the previous example any day of the week. Laughing

    I also don't have a single special interest myself. This may be more or less common than I think so I'll just share: I have a main one Art*, and crafts by extension, that I've had the longest and decicated a lot of time and skill gain towards but I fail to see how that differes from a hobby as I don't even mention it much unless I'm in the company of other creative people. And I have "lesser" interests that are equally long lasting, history, archaeology, paleontology, biology, zoology, psychology, criminal profiling, and crime scene analysis, military vehicles, literature... and many more so I don't struggle to find a common topic to discus with people in conversations either.

    *The act of making art in a skill based sense more so than art history. The only art history big names I have any great interest in their work is Mucha and Kandinski.

  • I'll take a fellow autist "banging on" about something that brings them joy for hours on end over chatting to the previous example any day of the week.

    Well said! 

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