Do people with AS react more strongly to pain?
Hypo to some pain and hyper to others. I had a bad tooth and it I only had a sharp pain one time - briefly. The dentist thought that I should have been crazy with pain.
If I smash a finger (in a car door etc.) I go into shock and pass out. Weird. Drop a piece of concrete on my foot and I am in pain, but nothing like the fingers.
Z
I'm hyposensitive to pain -- very high threshold. It runs in my family. I never could understand why my husband and daughter would complain about things that seemed very minor to me. It took a long while before I understood that they were experiencing something very different from what I was experiencing.
Patricia
I'm over-sensitive to some things (period pain, stomach aches, burns) and under-sensitive to most others - I routinely get injured sparring and don't realise it until the joint gives way when I try to use it, or until the bruise shows up. I have now learned not to chew on myself to relax as it leaves the kinds of marks people ask tricky questions about.
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The rule for today.
Touch my tail, I shred your hand.
New rule tomorrow.
Both yes and no.
There have been times in my life when a simple touch was painful. I've also lived with chronic pain in my neck due to nerve compression which took a lot of pain killers to make manageable.
A simple sneeze while in that condition made me swear out loud with agony - which got me some very strange looks from strangers.
However, on the other side I can chose not to feel pain to certain parts of my body if I'm expecting it. A number of years ago my friends didn't believe me and I allowed them to burn a freshly lit cigarette right down to the stub while pressed against the back of my hand. While I chose not to feel the pain, the stunt wasn't worth it as they'd actually burnt a hole right through my skin and into the tendons. It took many months for the hole to heal and I still have a scar to this day. It was a pretty dumb thing to allow them to do. ![]()
Sounds like me. I am very sensitive to instant, intense pain. However, headaches, toothaches, somachaches etc. I am not very sensitive to at all.
I am much less sensitive to pain now than I used to though, now I have about a normal threshold. However, I tend to be more scared of pain than others, even if it doesn't hurt me more than anyone else.
I'm extremely sensitive to physical pain. Being a living body hurts, just from my own experience. Periods, toothaches, bruises, infected cuticles, zits, etc. I've only ever (in my entire life, so far) broken one bone, my big toe-and that was excruciating.
There are lots of negative words for people who feel a lot of pain & I don't like those names-they imply that sensing pain and being overwhelmed with reactions as consequence should lead to blame towards sufferer. Most people who are full of hurt & engulfed in pain don't want to be feeling so miserable.
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*"I don't know what it is, but I know what it isn't."*
I'm hypersensitive to pains such as pricks with needles that many people seem to describe as mere discomfort. Well, to me it hurts like hell.
To many other types of pain - concussions, knife in my leg (that was an accident) and other things that make other people react as if I must be severely hurt - I'm hyposensitive. It doesn't hurt or does only very minimally hurt.
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Autism + ADHD
++++ no spell check when posting from my IPAD ++++
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The trouble with having an open mind, of course, is that people will insist on coming along and trying to put things in it. Terry Pratchett
I think my pain threshold is relatively low... and I seem to be the most ticklish person I know, as well as much more easily affected by heat and cold. I've never been able to concentrate when it's too hot... and stuff.
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Thousands of candles can be lit from a single candle,
and the life of the candle will not be shortened.
Happiness never decreases by being shared.
bookwormde
I agree that a lot of it is psychological and varies from instance to instance in each individual. I work in a tattoo shop and virgins are always asking "Is it gonna hurt?" and there's no set answer to that. I've been tattooed and felt no discomfort at all and I've been tattooed and nearly broken the footrest off the chair from pushing against it to tolerate the pain. Some spots are more sensitive than others, some days you're more acutely aware of sensation than others, depends on your mood, your current focus, the body part involved, your personal physiology and who knows what else.
I did read somewhere online the other day that Aspies supposedly have a higher pain tolerance than NTs but I see no evidence of that in RL.
Well im a self harmer although I've been free a couple of months. I have burnt and cut myself pretty badly in the past, my entire left arm from shoulder to wrist is thick with scars, so I would consider myself hyposensitive. I ended wondering around the woods on the point of collapse with a temperature of 104 because I didn't realise I had a sore throat, I've trod on needles etc.
When I am ill I'm just quieter than normal and I want to be left alone, everyone else seems to complain, my brother thinks he's dying, he moans and moans. I am the least sympathetic person ever, my family understand that now.
Im hyper alert to any pain or discomfort in my mouth but thats due to a phobia of teeth.
My hands are the most sensitive, I was organising the piles of rubbish in the garden and I couldn't clutch the brambles without gloves.
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