Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.[/quote
Op here. I experience the exact same feelings you do PP. Similar scenarios too.
Of course it falls flat, you are nagging people you don't even know when they haven't yet forgotten their sunglasses. It's ridiculous. It doesn't show that you "care" about them or are smarter than everyone else.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You seem to think it’s the difference of viewpoints/opinions, but to me it sounds more like an issue with communication (and, not to pile on, but your OP is a good example of that). The phrase that jumped out from your OP is the “I ask a question and get a totally different type of response”. That seems to imply that someone is completely misunderstanding you or that your point is not coming across well.
I wouldn’t jump to “autism” right away but do consider that you might have a learning disability. There are many that can affect language/processing/communication. For example, my DD has a learning disability in “reading comprehension” but it can manifest itself in speech. She struggles with inferences, analogies, metaphors etc. among other things.
It's this (not predicting whether somebody will leave their sunglasses behind--that's just "intuition" that comes from experience). I experience this every often, and I tend to have it with the same people consistently. When working through a problem, I understand all the words coming out of my co-worker's mouth, but put together, they aren't really saying anything--like there's no point. And I can't figure out if it's me, or them. So we're talking, but not communicating. I'm pretty sure I have ADHD, but also have high intelligence and understand very complicated things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.
How can you tell that someone will leave their sunglasses on the corner of the table? I mean, what are the clues?
I still don’t understand what OP means.
Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.
Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.
Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.
Anonymous wrote:Op, this may be me, but I am a foreigner. No autism here.
I notice details others seem to miss. If a customer arrives upset, I notice it. I can also tell you which items a customer might leave behind like sunglasses on the corner of their table.
My coworkers would not care, because the customer hasn't even left yet. But then act so surprised when the item if left behind. I tried to tell them meanwhile to make sure this wouldn't happen. Falls flat every time.
Maybe this is not what you are talking about, but this is my problem. The other day I put two separate occurrences together. Nobody else knew they even happened even though they were there.
I need to care less or be involved less. Drives me crazy when they don't notice.[/quote
Op here. I experience the exact same feelings you do PP. Similar scenarios too.
Anonymous wrote:You seem to think it’s the difference of viewpoints/opinions, but to me it sounds more like an issue with communication (and, not to pile on, but your OP is a good example of that). The phrase that jumped out from your OP is the “I ask a question and get a totally different type of response”. That seems to imply that someone is completely misunderstanding you or that your point is not coming across well.
I wouldn’t jump to “autism” right away but do consider that you might have a learning disability. There are many that can affect language/processing/communication. For example, my DD has a learning disability in “reading comprehension” but it can manifest itself in speech. She struggles with inferences, analogies, metaphors etc. among other things.