Published on 12, July, 2020
This comes up a lot in the forums.
That our brains are 'wired differently'.
I'd like to learn what that actually means scientifically, and also perhaps some of us might like to share how we experience our brains.
I think mine ticks over very fast, and I see it as a canoe drifting down a river with waterfalls either side ie danger ahead.
Please share any links you know of that explain our minds.
Here's one I found:
https://www.psycom.net/autism-brain-differences
Hi Debbie
Thanks for starting this discussion and sharing the article. I know that our autistic brains have more connections between synapses which means that we process around 42% more information than non autistic people at resting rate. Here is a link to an article about our monotropic brain and our learning style:
https://autistic-village.com/2021/08/05/building-super-highways-why-monotropism-works-for-autistics/
It’s a brilliant article, I hope you find it interesting.
I don’t like the article you have linked to as it falsely describes us as disordered, we are neurodivergent not disordered!
I am very aware that my brain works very fast in comparison to non autistic people and makes deep connections and patterns between interests. I am also a very deep thinker and I analyse everything- thanks to being monotropic! As a child I always wondered why non autistic people did not think as deeply as I did.
Thank you for this link. I can relate to things mentioned. At work if I have a complicated problem to solve I hyper focus until resolved, but don't find it easy to manage interruptions. I am not a 'typical' woman who is supposed to be good at multi-tasking.
I also need to know the 'why' which some people don't understand when it might be a small part of a conversation or news article and it might need some researching. My work colleagues probably find me a bit of a nuisance sometimes as I always want to know full details and explanations.
I also find I process things slower than some, so if someone gives me a list of places that have been in the news recently they have to give me the list slow enough, so I can process whether I know each place. The same is true of instructions. I read slowly for the same reason as I think about the sentences. If we had to read in class at school I was usually the last to finish.
I've just read that article.
Thank you for sharing.
Very interesting.
Just remembered another resource by Neuroclastic that is brilliant:
Understanding the Autistic Mind:
https://neuroclastic.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/UNDERSTANDING-THE-AUTISTIC-MIND-11.pdf