Joe90 wrote:
I'm good with reading facial expressions, body language, tone of voice and other non-verbal cues from instinct, which then makes me wonder why I was diagnosed with AS because it seems more common for those with ASDs to not understand non-verbal cues. I was even told that it is not possible for someone with ASDs to be able to read non-verbal cues by instinct.
The only problem is, if someone gave me a written test about non-verbal cues, I would get a zero. If somebody was with me and pointed to a random person and said, ''how's she feeling?'', my mind would shut down, probably out of fear of getting it wrong. But if I happened have just saw the person without being asked how she was feeling and expected to give a logical answer, I would sort of know how she's feeling by instinct. Well, that is if she was giving off some sort of expression to make you notice how she's feeling, not if she was just hiding all her emotions on the outside like people often do when they're just out alone. It's a bit like someone asking you to logically explain what the word ''the'' means, I wouldn't know how to explain it at all, even though I use the word ''the'' every day without realising it.
What confuses me is, on WP often a thread comes up saying about a particular emotion being an Aspie trait. It could be any emotion, like anger, fear (irrational fear aswell), excitement, anxiety, sorrow, et cetera, et cetera. But in the next breath it's NTs that are always feeling some sort of emotion all the time. Explain please?
Like someone else said I don't think the criteria
completely precludes being able to naturally read some people's emotions, sometimes. Personally I am
REALLY REALLY bad at it - like my cluelessness about other people's emotional states causes semi-regular arguments with the people around me - but like you sometimes I am still able "get it". The criteria definitely mentions "impairments" rather than "absence" of non-verbal communication so I don't think the fact you're better than some other people here at doing that means a lot for your diagnosis.