I don’t like the quiet ones.

Have you ever had to interact with a certain type of autistic person who believes that their autism gives them a right to your silence? As an autistic person myself I find it incredibly irritating.

like many autistic people i’m used to getting comments about ‘you’re shouting’ when I’m not shouting but I’m talking more loudly than people expect. For me Stimming can be something as simple as humming a musical under my breath. Something that is likely to indicate that I’m stressed out. In fact I’m more stressed out I am the more likely I am to be making some kind of ‘noise.’ Humming, tapping, singing etc. and of course what stresses me out more is being told I’m making ‘noise’ and I need to stop or else.

absolutely one of the most offensive things you can possibly do is to tell me I am ‘laughing too loud.’ because to enjoy humour and comedy you have to have a lack of self consciousness and it’s absolutely impossible to have a lack of self consciousness if you are worrying about ‘laughing too loud.’

so to those people who think autism gives them a right to demand quietness, to turn the whole world into a library (and I say  it as someone who likes libraries) I have to say to you respectfully no it doesn’t. Here’s a set of earplugs, deal with it.

but in truth what offends me the most is them speaking on my behalf. equating autism with this supersensitivity to sound. A lot of us do not get this. A lot of us struggle with social issues; it is after all one of the defining aspects of autism, and it’s really unhelpful when Neurotypicals get the wrong end of the stick and think that autism is just somehow some sort of super sensitive hearing / touch thing. Because from my point of view the thing Neurotypicals really need to understand is how autism affects social interaction.

that is one of the two major things all autistic people share, issues with social interaction. it’s the aspect Neurotypicals tend to really struggle to get their heads around. It’s really un helpful when people paint this inaccurate picture of the autistic presentation. You know the stereotype. If you’re autistic you’ve got to be really quiet and painfully polite and a real indoors introvert that would rather deal with animals than people. Someone who can’t stand noise and hates a party and is really adverse to confrontation. A completely rubbish stereotype that is completely the opposite of people like me.

The person in the room laughing the loudest at the most inappropriate joke. The person who is always trying to stave off boredom and likes a good party and dancing to loud music. The guy looking to turn the conversation to something interesting and weird because every day life is so banal. It would be nice for me personally if we could have a bit of representation among the autistic community that represents me. It’s bad enough that the media gets it wrong, it’s intolerable when other autistic people present the quiet stereotypes as being authentic.

Parents
  • so to those people who think autism gives them a right to demand quietness, to turn the whole world into a library (and I say  it as someone who likes libraries) I have to say to you respectfully no it doesn’t. Here’s a set of earplugs, deal with it.

    So we don’t have a right to quiet, but you do have a right to make excess noise?

    That doesn’t sound very fair or equitable does it? Why should your needs trump other peoples’?

    Perhaps a bit of compromise and understanding would be better?

  • I'm all in faviour of compromise. the best kind are those where everyone gets what they want. of course obviously not in the same place at the same time.

  • there is that though really... i mean people who want loud can live in cities, people who want quiet can live in more rural areas. although were you live is always about money and cost so thats kinda easier said than done. and a nice quiet area often will get noticed by city types who then will all decide its a nice place to move in and all move in and turn it into a loud ugly city.

  • I'm rural, but love loud music. It's about being myself. Best of both worlds.

    Cities have those who 'Karen' you if their sleep is disturbed. It happened me, in a Neighbourhood Watch area. In Dun Laoghaire; during my Placement Year. On reflection, I was naïve; and wasn't aware of city idiosyncrasies. But it was the slippery slope to the dobbing culture of 2020.

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  • I'm rural, but love loud music. It's about being myself. Best of both worlds.

    Cities have those who 'Karen' you if their sleep is disturbed. It happened me, in a Neighbourhood Watch area. In Dun Laoghaire; during my Placement Year. On reflection, I was naïve; and wasn't aware of city idiosyncrasies. But it was the slippery slope to the dobbing culture of 2020.

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