BirdInFlight wrote:
Yes, totally. TV, radio, stereo, loud restaurant full of other chatter, even loud noise of passing traffic in a busy street -- I struggle to have a conversation when there is any background noise of a significant level. I also struggle when there is more than one person involved in the conversation and a lot of crosstalking and interruption instead of people taking turns.
I recently posted my own post about this kind of thing, where a friend put on some music in his car while we were driving somewhere, and I experimented for the first time with telling someone (him) that actually it makes it very hard for me to continue a conversation.
He then goaded me with that every time we spoke after that, even playing music when we talked on the phone as his "jokey" way to say he had to wrap up and end the call -- which I did not find amusing.
I struggle with it because my brain starts to feel overloaded with the various inputs of sound. I "pay attention" to both sources of sound without being able to help it, and my brain starts to seize-up, I can't concentrate on what the other person is saying, I can't concentrate on forming my thoughts as to what I'm saying -- it all becomes overload. If I push myself to just keep going anyway, it's a direct road to meltdown or shutdown.
Sounds like your 'friend' is very ignorant about your issues although humour ( sarcastic humour ) appears to be a natural reaction by most , as if laughter fixes all ailments
I've never pushed myself through it by grinning and bearing it , at it's worst it starts to feel like I'm losing mind. I've had several breakdowns in my life and if feels like it could be the start of another and that scares the hell out of me.
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