wavefreak58 wrote:
I've been working on cognitive issues, especially relating to focusing attention on conversations at work while minimizing my propensity for mental digressions. For example, not letting my my wander during meetings even when it's boring.
What I'm finding is that the more I focus on the cognitive, the less control I seem to have on overt stimming. I rock and twitch and hand wring much more visibly. It seems that the more present I am, the more intently engaged in the conversation, the more I lose awareness of my body.
I suspect others may have gone through this and I'm wondering if at some point the focusing become automatic enough to allow me some control over the stims or if I'm doomed to either clearer cognition or less visible stims.
This is an issue because the cognitive aspects are critical to my job. I've always had trouble with this and now that I'm trying, and even somewhat succeeding, to solve this the cognitive challenges, the stimming seems to be more obvious.
Yeah I can relate to that......as for the not letting my mind wander if I am in a boring class, or meeting, or conversation I cant really prevent it but if I'm talking to someone and bored of the conversation I can sometimes respond without actually thinking about it so they think I'm listening and paying attention but I am not.
If I were to try to stay focused chances are I would stim more by moving my hands a lot maybe touching my face and stuff like that, it also increases if I am anxious. If I were in a classroom or meeting I tend to fidget with stuff when paying attention, and sometimes if it gets boring I get distracted by my own thoughts or distracted by whatever I'm fidgeting with.
I guess the responding without being focused is kind of a stim I taught myself because it tends to be more acceptable than the others.
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