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Surn
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23 Jun 2009, 4:00 pm

I talk to myself all the time at work. My mother has reminded/nagged me multiple times not to do so but I still do. I just try doing it without moving my lips and it's noisy enough there that no one can hear me.



Brittany2907
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23 Jun 2009, 8:01 pm

Sometimes when I'm using the computer I find that I start talking to myself. It's like I have a conversation with myself about how I should or shouldn't have done something in a certain situation, and then I replay the situation outloud as to correct it. Now that I've written this down I realize just how odd it sounds.


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stonemask
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23 Jun 2009, 8:42 pm

OMG I talk to myself all the time. Not always out loud but often I find myself talking in a mumble to myself. I try not to do it around other people but it just slips out sometimes. I don't really let it bother me I've seen both my NT parents do it on occasion.


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fiddlerpianist
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23 Jun 2009, 9:04 pm

ToughDiamond wrote:
MommyJones wrote:
I rehearse conversations I'm going to have

Yes I do that too - I forgot that one. That's the most embarrassing one for being overheard.....I tend to practise my intonation and delivery style, so it really looks like I'm talking to somebody who isn't there :oops:

All you need to do is to put a cell phone ear bud in your ear. Then people won't think you're crazy. :)


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ToughDiamond
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24 Jun 2009, 4:46 am

fiddlerpianist wrote:
ToughDiamond wrote:
MommyJones wrote:
I rehearse conversations I'm going to have

Yes I do that too - I forgot that one. That's the most embarrassing one for being overheard.....I tend to practise my intonation and delivery style, so it really looks like I'm talking to somebody who isn't there :oops:

All you need to do is to put a cell phone ear bud in your ear. Then people won't think you're crazy. :)

I would, but Mr. Hat says I mustn't :(



Marcia
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24 Jun 2009, 6:00 am

I'm not on the Spectrum, although lots of traits.

I talk to myself all the time, although I do try not to do it in front of other people. I'm aware that I'm doing it more now in public places. like parks, and sometimes people have walked round a corner and caught me talking to myself. I just stop and walk quickly on. If my hair was longer then I suppose they might think I had one of those mobile phones that sit on your ear.

When I talk to myself, it's as if I'm talking to someone else, and I talk through problems I'm having, or particular situations. It helps me to work things out if I can hear it being said, rather than just thought.

I don't think it's a particularly AS thing either. Lots of people do it, and for different reasons. Many people who have bereaved, for example, will talk aloud to the person who is dead. Again, it seems to be that it helps them work through problems, or to talk about something that has happened. They know that the other person isn't there, but it helps them.

I used to share the drive to work with a colleague who is very NT, and one day he referred very specifically to a conversation we'd apparently had the day before. He was surprised when I reminded him I hadn't been at work the day before, and told me that he'd had a conversation with me even though I wasn't there! :lol:



willmark
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24 Jun 2009, 7:35 am

Side Note: I think I am going to need to find a thread that describes what a very NT person would look or be like. I expect NTs are as diverse as ASDs. That description doesn't communicate anything to me yet.

When I am reading something that I am having problems focusing on, or getting a mental image of, I will read it out loud softly to myself. There is something about experiencing it in three separate senses that makes it easier for me to retain. I am recording the same thing in my mind in three different memories. I wonder if this is related to why we tend to think out loud.



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24 Jun 2009, 9:06 am

I don't talk to myself.
When I used to watch TV, occasionally I'd talk to the characters in the show, but just one or two lines... as in "Don't do that..." "How stupid can you get" "What were the script writers ON?"

When I was younger (20-somethings), I used verbally to re-hash arguments I'd had, saying all the things I wished I'd said. But somewhere along the line, I decided it looked psycho and it just sort of self-extinguished...

I don't talk to my animals, I don't talk to myself... it's too much racket.
:lol:
I like the quiet.

My mother (unDx AS) talked endlessly and often loud. And rudely. You couldn't shut her up... trust me, we all tried.
Maybe that's why I'm so quiet.



LipstickKiller
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24 Jun 2009, 3:45 pm

Quote:
i can not spell that sentence as i pronounced it because the "t"'s are obliterated by a "throat cut off" thing that staunch scotsmen exhibit in their accents when they pronounce a "t" in the middle of a word).


It's called a glottal stop, also frequent in Cockney accents :) (I'm a linguist)



desdemona
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24 Jun 2009, 11:39 pm

I talk outloud to myself. I have never really learned not to do this, but I do know it isn't appropriate. I do it mostly to talk out how I am going to do something but it might be something quite small.
I have heard it is typical on the spectrum, but I guess it isn't only people on the spectrum. I think it is actually a bit eccentric. (he he people my age are eccentric! LOL!)

--des



Psygirl6
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25 Jun 2009, 9:49 am

[quote="DonkeyBuster"]
When I was younger (20-somethings), I used verbally to re-hash arguments I'd had, saying all the things I wished I'd said. But somewhere along the line, I decided it looked psycho and it just sort of self-extinguished...

I have the same issue that are part of getting rid of my "memories", where I was in bad situations and these situations keep playing in my head. the only way i get rid of them is to say all of the things that I wanted to say and to make them go the way i wanted and needed them to go, instead of the actually way they went, which went for the other person. I would like to stop, and i have talk to my therapist and other about it and they tell em that it is in the past. I am not able to digest medications because of a permanent complication from a surgery last year, plus I am intolerant of them because they did not work and got me sicker. We all know that my problem is situational and when i was on medications, they memories got worse, where not only did I talk out loud to get rid of them, but I was resentful to the people who caused the stressful situation that led me into them, where I would make life hell for them. i was not aggressive, but I said and did things to make them feel bad. I would yell at them to tell them to get lost, i would write mean things to them and about them. Now I just have the memories and I avoid these people at all cost.



dolfinnyc
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26 Jun 2010, 9:02 am

I don't talk to myself all the time, but have developed a habit of shouting when an embarrassing memory passes through my mind. To stop the feeling of embarrassment, I'll start shouting something very loudly - it might be I LOVE LIFE! it might be I WANT TO DIE! it might be MACARONI AND CHEESE! Its always involuntary and very troubling to me - it rarely happens in public and never when I'm in an obvious social situation like work. At home though, it can be frequent, especially if the embarrassing memory is recent. A good example: I was reading a book that suddenly described people saying nice things at a funeral - I started shouting the words I was reading because it reminded me of my brother's funeral where I said, not unkind things, but neither were they fond memories. I still feel embarrassment after 2 years, so anything reminding me of funerals when i'm alone are a problem. I also worry about someone knocking on my door after a shouting episode to ask if there's a problem (its VERY loud). My plan if that ever does happen is to say i stubbed my toe and don't like to curse LOL



kx250rider
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26 Jun 2010, 11:38 am

I've done that since I was old enough to speak. I put a lid on it in public, so that people wouldn't think I was a nut case. In thinking things over in preparation to make a decision, I would speak (and think) omnisciently between my pro and con thoughts, on whatever the subject.

Charles



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26 Jun 2010, 12:38 pm

I was curious about this so I asked my mom and she said she also talks to herself. She is NT but maybe not totally typical. She thinks it is a normal thing for people to do.

So I told her I also talk to inanimate objects, like my clothes or my iPod. She said that was normal too! Hahaha. I dunno...



ProfessorX
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26 Jun 2010, 7:24 pm

Yes, I've done that as a kid.In fact, I still do it to this very day but, in more subtel manner though for, I wish not to be seen as without my marbles you could say... :oops: 8O



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26 Jun 2010, 9:16 pm

Talking to myself out loud is normal for me. Also I talk to the dog. I try not to talk to myself in public but don't always succeed.