Evasive Eyes and Excessive Honesty

Autism_Awareness_RibbonI first noticed that I had a problem looking people in the eyes in high school.  I realized that I was supposed to look people in the eyes when I talked to them, but – for a reason I wouldn’t fully understand until earlier this year – it made me uncomfortable.  I could look someone in the eyes for a minute or two.  Perhaps more if I felt really comfortable with the person and/or subject being discussed.  However, the longer I looked at their eyes, the more uncomfortable I became.

Flash forward to the present day and this is something NHL struggles with.  He will look away from people as they talk to him, sometimes even engaging in completely unrelated activities.  It seems like he’s simply not paying attention, but he is.  If prompted, he can give a full accounting of what he was told.  When he’s the one doing the talking, he rarely will look you in the eyes.  In fact, he’ll often begin a conversation and keep talking "to you" as he leaves the room.  (Something, I must note, that I used to do when I was young.)  It’s as if he completely doesn’t realize that a conversation is over if the two people are no longer near each other.

And he doesn’t.

Kids (and adults) with Asperger’s don’t understand the "rules of social conduct" the way neuro-typical people do.  They can learn, but it can take years of hard work while neuro-typical people, having taken knowledge of the ins and outs of social conduct for granted, look upon them as "weird" and "strange."

Even now, I struggle, though  I’ve developed some coping mechanisms without realizing it.  For example, if I’m talking to a person who is far enough away from me, I fix my eyes on a spot just behind their head.  It appears that I’m looking at their eyes, but instead I’m looking at a lamp or painting.  If I’m too close for that, I’ll focus on their nose or mouth instead.  It’s close enough to the eyes to give the illusion of looking at the person’s eyes, but doesn’t make me as uncomfortable.

Another area that people with Asperger’s struggle with is lying or omission of knowledge.  I can be honest to a fault.  Keeping information from a person or telling them a lie is very stressful to me.  I can do it for small items (for example, if I’m going to surprise B with a birthday present), but for larger items it becomes tricky.

NHL has this problem as well.  If a stranger asks him how his day went, he’ll start a long-winded story about every detail of his day.  Every level of every game played, every second of every movie watched, etc.  All the person was looking for was a "pretty good" with perhaps one concise example.  Instead, they get the whole enchilada.  NHL can’t lie either.  He can (and often will) try, but his attempts at lying are so transparent that they invariably fall flat.

You might think excessive honesty would be a good thing, but it can be very tricky when you find you need to keep something a secret.  Once, while trading in my car and buying a new one, I let slip that the transmission might be going on the old car. I don’t know why I said it and immediately knew I shouldn’t have said it, but the words were already out of my mouth. It wasn’t like we were trying to cheat the dealer.  The transmission was just a theory we had (not a mechanic-diagnosed problem) and the dealer hadn’t asked me about any problems the car might be experiencing.  Still, the information was inside me and it was like it forced its way out without me being able to stop it.  My inability to withhold information most likely negatively affected the trade-in price we were given.

So if you ever meet me or NHL and we talk your ear off about something we’re excited about while looking at something else, please be patient.  We’re not intending to be rude.  We’re just trying to fit into what is often a strange, confusing, and over-whelming neuro-typical world.

NOTE: The Autism Awareness ribbon icon above was created by Melesse and comes from Wikimedia Commons.

Special Features

Chrisdesign_CD_DVDOver the weekend, we watched Disney Pixar’s Brave.  After watching the movie, NHL immediately had two reactions.  First, he loved the movie.  Second, he wanted to see the Special Features.

Special features are NHL’s favorite part of the DVD/Blu-Ray viewing experience.  He loves seeing deleted scenes (and figuring out where they would have fit and/or why they were removed), alternate endings, and even (sometimes) small featurettes.  If the disc has enough special features, he might even spend more time watching them than the spent watching the movie itself.

In the case of Brave, he watched two special features on the DVD.  The first was a short film that Pixar put in front of Brave during its run in the theatres called La Luna.  The second was an expansion on the Mordu legend that was introduced within Brave.  The one feature that NHL didn’t watch, which might have bored him but was highly interesting to me, was the audio commentary.  During this, the filmmakers talked about how Brave changed throughout the process.  They revealed how scenes were supposed to play out originally and how they morphed (for the better) to the version you see onscreen.  I love these little glimpses of the special kind of magic that it takes to put a movie together.

Do you watch the special features on DVDs and/or Blu-Rays?  Or do you just watch the movie itself?

Note: The "CD / DVD" image above is from Chrisdesign and is available from OpenClipArt.org.

Aloha Friday: Disney World #Fantasyland Bound

On my Wordless Wednesday: Disney World Trips Through The Years post, I revealed that we’ll be going to Disney World.  More specifically, Disney is flying me down to cover the official grand opening of the new Fantasyland.  B’s coming with me, but the kids will remain at home with B’s parents.

While there, we might see the Beast’s castle (where you can eat in the Be Our Guest restaurant), Gaston’s tavern (with antlers in all of his decorating), Journey Under The Sea with The Little Mermaid, the storybook circus area with the twin Dumbo rides, and more.  We should also get to see the re-opening of Test Track in Epcot.

Of course, I’ll be taking plenty of photos and videos.  Some will be immediately tweeted, but others will be saved for blog posts.

My Aloha Friday question for today is: What part of the new Fantasyland would you most like to see?

P.S. If you haven’t already, try out my Twitter applications: FollowerHQ and Rout.


Thanks to Kailani at An Island Life for starting this fun for Friday. Please be sure to head over to her blog to say hello and sign the linky there if you are participating.

Aloha Friday by Kailani at An Island Life

Aloha #166

Jackpot Dreaming

n_kamil_Money_-_banknotes_and_coinAs I write this post, on Wednesday night, the Powerball lottery hasn’t been drawn.  We don’t usually buy lottery tickets, but will sometimes buy a ticket or two when the Jackpot rises high.  Yes, I know that I’m more likely to be struck by lightning than win the lottery, but it’s the more the entertainment of the matter than an actual belief that I’m going to win.  Unfortunately, I forgot to buy a lottery ticket so, unless nobody wins the drawing, I’ll have to skip out on the "entertainment’ this time around.

Like many people, I’ve found that I need to live within a pretty tight budget.  There are a ton of items that I’d love to buy, but my finances nix those plans.  So what would I do if I won a big lottery jackpot?

First, of course, I would pay up all of our debts.  Our home mortgage and other loans would get immediately paid off.  Once we had no more debt, I’d put a nice big sum of money into bank accounts for the both of the kids for college, in our own bank account to save, and in a trust for the kids to access when they get older.  I would also give family and friends some money.

Next, with debt and saving out of the way, I would turn to spending some money.  I would buy a new car for B.  Mine isn’t too old, but I might splurge and get a new one also.  I’d go on a bit of a tech/geek spending spree, buying some computer equipment, DVDs, and the like.

My biggest purchase, though, would be a massive Disney World vacation.  I would pay for not only B, the boys, and me, but for my parents, B’s parents, my sister and her family, B’s brother and his family, and perhaps some other relatives.  We would fly to Florida, stay at a deluxe resort, eat at the best restaurants Disney has to offer, and have fun in the parks as one big happy family.

If you won a big lottery jackpot, what would you spend your winnings on?

NOTE: The money image above is by n_kamil and is available from OpenClipArt.org.

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