This topic was really interesting and there were some fantastic insights here. In particular, Mikomi and Sora really shed some light on the subject for me. I'd always read that autism = decreased creative abilities. But then, my best friend, who has AS, is an amazingly creative person. He writes poetry, for instance. It's amazing, quirky, brilliant, and unique poetry. I should ask him if I can post some of it on here... I bet he'd be up for it! Not only that, but he also thinks in a very imaginative way, just on an everyday basis. He sees interesting shapes in the clouds and watching the sunset is a profound experience to him... Most people aren't like that, at least not in the NT world which I'm accustomed to. (In fact, until now, I'm the only person I've known to be like that.) If all people with AS react with such intrigue and wonder to the world around them, I'd say they're very imaginative people indeed.
On a similar topic, I must ask if people with AS in general have trouble with creative visualizations, say, creating imagery in the mind's eye. I'm asking this because my friend Erik and I are studying shamanic journeying which requires that we picture imagined scenerios in our minds. He, being the very imaginative and creative person I have already described, has a terrible time doing this. Does anyone have any idea why? We would really like to know!
Perhaps it's because these imagined scenerios are too made up to make sense to his very orderly mind? Poetry and cloud shapes are real concrete things... By contrast, imagining that you're inside an orange, perceiving it with all of your senses, may seem too unreal and almost ridiculous to someone so logic based. Do you think that could be it?