infilove wrote:
I know exactly what your talking about. I feel like you really can't answer any question with a straight up yes or no answer. There's always a gray area at varying degrees. I find the variation can be on multiple levels too. I think this gift is what causes us to struggle sometimes such as understanding people, social interaction, and reading social cues....we can see multiple meaning instead of just one like an NT would see and these multiple meanings can sometimes confuse us.
Or if not meanings, then at least situations, which makes it so hard to answer most polls and quizzes. Like that terrible Myers Briggs test, where there is nothing but yes or no, when the true answer depends entirely on the situation.
In most real life situations you tend to know a bit more what they're asking., which makes it more concrete.
Quote:
Dad: Did you study today?
(Expected answer Yes/No)
Me: I was just in my room reading my textbook before dinner.
Dad: Are you going to get in the pool?
(expect Yes/No)
Me: Well I have to do laundry/clean house and finish chores then I might get in the pool.
I would've just answered the first one with a yes (Unless I'd been slacking off most of the day instead and tried to make it sound as though I'd been studying longer than I had).
For the second part, I'd likely have said 'yes' or 'yeah, once the laundry's done.'
Quote:
I think is because we are too fixated on trying to find the absolute correct answer so what we say is set in stone. Then we get too caught up in the details of things and cant figure out the big picture.
My father often says I'm too hung up on the minor details. I think people are too little preoccupied with details. Details are very important. One minor detail can change it all.