Silence

I am most comfortable with complete silence.

I wonder if this is the autism at play?

When I was growing up our house was always noisy and I think I was traumatised by it.

There were no quiet refuges - I even shared a bedroom until I left home.

My mum had to have sound on all the time.  I believe she was autistic but I think she had an under sensitivity to noise, which I'm pretty sure I've read can also be an autism thing.

Then I had a series of shared flats, which were noisy, then bedsits until I purchased a quiet flat in my 30s.

Then I lived in a nice Victorian house on my own which still had some noise, as it was on a busy road in Portsmouth and terraced.

Nowadays I am lucky.

The last 15 years I have lived in a very quiet detached house where once the windows are closed there is no outside (or inside often) noise at all.

My husband is a quiet person + spends a lot of time in his studio outside.

It's taken me a long time to get to this quiet place in my life - I am now 61.

How do you respond to noise/silence?

Parents
  • I also grew up in a noisy house, but it affected me in the opposite way. I need overstimulation, silence forces me to hear the noise in my head, and I can't concentrate - I flit from thought or activity to thought or activity at a ridiculous pace. When I have solitary work, I almost always go to a familiar bar or café and set up shop there. I need the loud music and interruptions to focus. I'm not sure what that says about me lol

Reply
  • I also grew up in a noisy house, but it affected me in the opposite way. I need overstimulation, silence forces me to hear the noise in my head, and I can't concentrate - I flit from thought or activity to thought or activity at a ridiculous pace. When I have solitary work, I almost always go to a familiar bar or café and set up shop there. I need the loud music and interruptions to focus. I'm not sure what that says about me lol

Children
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