Anyone else never get sensory overload.
Well, it's nothing like a mental breakdown for me personally. I don't know if you want my opinion since I'm a "cousin", not an Aspie (though the Psychologist told me I would be if I didn't have developmental delays and apparently if I was either classic Autism of AS - I'd be AS), but I am emotionally empathic and my sense of hearing is sometimes so much that I don't realize that someone's trying to communicate with me since I hear too much noise. This unfortunate mixture often leaves me paranoid to some degree and often, I'm surprised by the most ordinary of sounds. In addition to that, I get offended easily since I have barely an idea about whether or not there were cues used by someone else that would hint ambiguous meanings like sarcasm or the like. I also think too much and often, see too much into things. Most of the teachers that I've ever had either tell me or are frustrated with me since I over-analyze quite a bit. I also get bouts of anxiety and depression because of this, so yeah, I can say I've definitely had sensory overload though I'm not an Aspie, but a "cousin". :3
Ca2MgFe5Si8O22OH2
Deinonychus
Joined: 14 Aug 2012
Age: 36
Gender: Female
Posts: 300
Location: Little Rock, AR
mine only manifests when I'm otherwise stressed. I've also noticed that I do things like hide under the blanket even if I'm alone in my room if I'm texting someone who is trying to date me (which brings up complex emotions, way more than most NTs have I think for like, just potential dates) or take 4 or 5 showers in one day if I'm stressed and there's nowhere else private and quiet and consistent in stimuli that I can go. I guess it's more than controlled stimming calms me when I'm stressed than that I get overstimulated, but I suppose if you had a lot of strangers touching me while playing dubstep and cooking bacon (vegetarian, the smell makes me extremely ill) I'd probably run away...
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KADI score: 114/130
Your Aspie score: 139 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 54 of 200
Conversion Disorder, General/Social Anxiety Disorder, Major Depression
ColdEyesWarmHeart
Velociraptor
Joined: 28 Oct 2012
Age: 43
Gender: Female
Posts: 477
Location: 51° North
I've never really had issues with sensory overload. This is one of the main reasons I sometimes doubt I have AS. When I am stressed, sounds do seem a bit harsher, but that's about it. I don't experience the overloads that other people here seem to experience.
I work in an automotive shop which can be quite loud. I do like to go to the locker room a couple times a day just to be somewhere quiet and be alone for a while, but I'm not sure if that's a response to being "overloaded" by all the noise.
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ASD Diagnosis on 7-17-14
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I can get social overload - my brain just gives up with the social stuff and I just hide in a corner or leave. I don't think this counts as sensory overload so voted no.
When I'm not forced to interact with people I'm fine, so supermarkets are fine (up to a point) and high streets (again, up to a point). I absolutely hate crowds and will simply never go into the city at this time of year, no matter what the provocation - but probably that's not so unusual.
My favourite trick for dealing with crowds is earphones (playing suitably loud music so I don't have to listen to everyone talking loudly about their private life... why do people do that?) and sunglasses - partly because the winter sun is *really* uncomfortable and partly because it stops people trying to make eye contact.
I have changed environments and have had about 5-6 meltdowns/shutdowns just in the last months.
Before I lived a really quite life and I could usually clench my teeth and deal with it because later I had the rest of the day to myself. I could easily sleep or cover my ears, put headphones in, or escape the situation. Now that I can't, I'm one step from a shutdown 100% of the time. Before I was several steps away and it never got to the point were I shutdown.
I'm not quite sure what I was like as a kid though All I know is I was always angry and cried at school because I didn't like being there.
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Undiagnosed, but very likely AS. Am looking into getting a diagnoses.
Scored within the AS range in almost all the tests/quizzes.
I get sensory overload on a daily basis, mostly from my children. I've a toddler who is very loud, so the home environment is the most stressful. There are many sources of noise, a phone ringing, doorbell, a couple of TV's, children asking questions, the list goes on. I can feel the tension building and usually get a sharp pain down my arm from stress.
I rarely get one. It's a matter of when things get too loud all of a sudden when things were quiet or quieter. Even a shrieking toddler can give me one I can't even read my book or play my game because of the noise they are making and I don't know when they are going to do it again. With my son, scolding him and threatening him to kick him out of my room helps, same as telling him if he wants a time out. I sometimes leave the room too after warning him I will leave if he doesn't stop screaming. My husband doesn't like what I do but it works most of the time.
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Son: Diagnosed w/anxiety and ADHD. Also academic delayed.
Daughter: NT, no diagnoses.
I have a problem with noise, and a sudden noise makes me jump out of my skin. Noises often seem disproportionally loud to me, especially high pitched ones. I don't like crowded places like public transport and busy shops or supermarkets. I have no problem with lights except flickering ones and I have no problem with supermarkets apart from the fact that there are a lot of distractions.
Tyri0n
Veteran
Joined: 24 Nov 2012
Age: 37
Gender: Male
Posts: 2,879
Location: Douchebag Capital of the World (aka Washington D.C.)
As a child, I was constantly overloaded and didn't tolerate changes in my environment well. I hated going to other people's houses or even into other classrooms as the sights and smells in unfamiliar rooms were too much. It was like a complete change in conciousness everywhere I went somewhere new, and it was hard to adjust myself when people were demanding things for me, like trying to get me to participate in an activity. I also hated changes in temperature (i.e. going outside for recess when it was too hot out or snowing, I would just scream and cry).
Over time, my sensory issues have faded gradually to the point where I don't have any, and to this day, I have no idea why this happened. It could explain why I am, in some ways, a hyposensitive pleasure seeker, because I am just dying to get this world back. I love fast rides, complex art, and certain psychedelic experiences. My senses have done a 180 as now I am just wanting a piece of the intense sensory stuff back. Even if it overloaded me at times, having the intense world was sometimes very pleasurable.
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Given a “tentative” diagnosis as a child as I needed services at school for what was later correctly discovered to be a major anxiety disorder.
This misdiagnosis caused me significant stress, which lessened upon finding out the truth about myself from my current and past long-term psychiatrists - that I am a highly sensitive person but do not have an autism spectrum disorder
My diagnoses - anxiety disorder, depression and traits of obsessive-compulsive disorder (all in remission).
I’m no longer involved with the ASD world.
If theres to much noice around me, i do get rather stressed out. Can get tempers, or even shut downs. - Or if i'm lucky "just" visual disturbances, headache and nausea.
Also have light sensitivity, and aint happy being outside without my sunglasses! - Even on a cloudy day...
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AS/ASD... vs. NT? We're all on the spectrum of humanity...
AQ=44, EQ=7, SQ=64, Aspie-quiz AS=162/200 NT=37/200
Sensory overloads and Social overloads are technically different, but for the purposes of this I think both can count easily fine.
Social overloads happen a bit more often, but the last sensory was when my dad dragged me to a Rodeo...
(TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME!)
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Ca2MgFe5Si8O22OH2
Deinonychus
Joined: 14 Aug 2012
Age: 36
Gender: Female
Posts: 300
Location: Little Rock, AR
Social overloads happen a bit more often, but the last sensory was when my dad dragged me to a Rodeo...
(TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME
TAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOMETAKEMEHOME!)
I did this at my own birthday dinner last month. of course it would've been mortally offensive to vocalize it but I just wanted to lock myself in my room for hours after we FINALLY got home, but my mom had baked a cake and of course you can't be absent for your own birthday cake and gaaaah. we were at Olive Garden and there were these people who just reminded me STRONGLY of the kinds of kids in middle school who used to tease me and were making practical jokes at each other and laughing the whole time and I was just so sure they had to be laughing at me even though I know they weren't....and yeah.
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KADI score: 114/130
Your Aspie score: 139 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 54 of 200
Conversion Disorder, General/Social Anxiety Disorder, Major Depression
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