x_amount_of_words wrote:
A savant is normally exceptionally gifted at one thing, but severely impaired in other areas of life. A savant skill is picked up immediatly, without training. Someone who has never played a guitar before and just picks it up and is able to play would be considered a savant. You can be extremely talented without being a savant. A lot of talented people with disabilities have splinter skills. A splinter skill is being really good at some areas such as math or science but being horrible at other things. I think a lot of people with AS have splinter skills. Most NTs seem to have a middle area for all things, while we seem to be more on one side of the extreme. If that makes sense...
This is quite accurate in my opinion. There are three types of savants---prodigious (Rainman type, Daniel Tammet type---like only 50 in the world), talent type (me), and splinter skill type (not real familiar with it). If I am fascinated by a musical instrument I can play it without training/lessons and very quickly---sometimes immediately. I don't understand it. I just say to audiences who ask how I learned to play, "The music just happens." I can't tell you what notes I am playing. And to think about it ahead of time, I often can't tell you what fret or key I hit first---it just happens. When I am playing, it is like a transparent shield encases me and I am alone in it. The audience is zoned out, but yet I am aware they are there---I just lose a lot of senses to them and I am so absorbed into the trance-like state of playing that I am like alone. When I finish playing a song, the senses return and it's like, "There is the audience again."
It is like an intense focus beam into the music for me as the focus of other things sort of vanish. I should note that I have seen the statistic of there being like 10% of autistics that are savants. And of course, not all savants are autistic.
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"My journey has just begun."