Demystifying autism and overstimulation | Inside Our Autistic Minds

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  • čas přidán 21. 02. 2023
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    Chris Packham meets other autistic people from across the UK and helps them create short films to reveal to their family and friends what’s really going on inside their minds.
    #BBC #InsideOurAutisticMinds #iPlayer
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Komentáře • 254

  • @PhoenixFeathers
    @PhoenixFeathers Před rokem +321

    I am 43, autistic, and feel completely invisible to society, yet I know I have talents. I am thinking of writing a book called “Invisible Me”. 😂

    • @davidhanifin2692
      @davidhanifin2692 Před rokem +34

      As a 44 yr old male who only got diagnosed 5.5 yrs ago, I encourage you to pursue the goal of writing a book. I'm the sort of person who would happily pay money for it. I believe most neurotypical people do their best to understand us but it's only people with ASD who can fully understand the condition which offers extreme difficulties but also extreme strengths & talents with typically less in the middle. The keyword being extreme or intense which can be advantageous but also a hinderance.

    • @suziebee4240
      @suziebee4240 Před rokem +14

      I would read it

    • @zennomad258
      @zennomad258 Před rokem +11

      ill buy it

    • @PhoenixFeathers
      @PhoenixFeathers Před rokem +14

      Thank you David, Suzie and Daemon 😊😊
      It really does feel like living parallel to society. Thoughts and ideas in ‘my’ stream are so completely different from those in the ‘regular’ stream. I feel I am observing a play I am not part of, and at the same time I don’t want to fall into the easy trap of feeling sorry for myself, because I often realize the brilliant place my mind is, and the joy that I am able to experience from it.
      It warms my heart you responded so kindly to my comment. 🪴🌸

    • @thekajalflaneur
      @thekajalflaneur Před rokem +6

      I feel the same, and mostly, that makes me feel free. Detached. But write that book!

  • @cromfrein5834
    @cromfrein5834 Před rokem +200

    It's always good to see folks help remove the stigma associated with autism!

    • @nartarlyiatremaynne1239
      @nartarlyiatremaynne1239 Před rokem +6

      I concur with your sentiment 100%
      Australia.

    • @Autism_Forever
      @Autism_Forever Před 10 měsíci +5

      WHY is there stigma??? We Autistics are great people. Everyone should love us.

    • @therespectedlex9794
      @therespectedlex9794 Před 8 měsíci +5

      ​@@Autism_ForeverNo, not necessarily. There are good and bad people, whether they are autistic or not.

    • @mydefenseisimpregnable
      @mydefenseisimpregnable Před 8 měsíci

      @@therespectedlex9794exactly

    • @PhoenixFeathers
      @PhoenixFeathers Před 5 měsíci

      I know someone who has autism and a personality disorder with narcissistic traits. She uses her autism as the excuse when she is lashing out at others. Autism in itself doesn’t mean someone is self aware and taking responsibility for their behaviour.

  • @TheVOLTAGEVIDEOS
    @TheVOLTAGEVIDEOS Před 23 dny +6

    This is spot on!!! Sensory distress and sensory joy! Nailed it!

  • @SarahJigglypuff
    @SarahJigglypuff Před rokem +62

    Trains are absolute hell for me. People talking loudly on the phone; people walking past who are wearing strong perfumes and aftershave; the lights in the carriages dimming and brightening according to the light outside; people brushing past me when I try to leave the train; and, of course, my favourite: every single carriage smelling of the on-train toilet. The joys of daily commute.

    • @Zopicloned
      @Zopicloned Před rokem +2

      I prefer trains over the bus!

    • @Zopicloned
      @Zopicloned Před rokem +5

      @@Alrightythen-es4gv Yeah thats one of the biggest issues with busses for me, they're way busier and they also don't tell you when your stop is so it makes me feel stressed. I always use a travel app on the bus

    • @LilChuunosuke
      @LilChuunosuke Před měsícem +1

      I cannot even work a job that requires me to commute via train or bus. Not unless i cater my schedule to the least busy hours and ask an employee for assistance. I cannot ride busy trains without disassociating. I can't hear or remember which stop is mine because my brain is so overloaded with information.

    • @PeppermintPatties
      @PeppermintPatties Před 20 dny

      I'm the same. The thought of using any public transport literally makes me ill. It's too unreliable and crazymaking in the UK, so I'm saving up for a car.

  • @JustMeImSami
    @JustMeImSami Před rokem +95

    Being on my own Autism journey and only being diagnosed at 40, i completely understand where Chris is coming from when he finds everything overwhelming when it comes to public spaces. I am also a nature seeker, I am more at home among the trees and sounds of nature than I am anywhere else. To finally see someone explain this in an easy to understand way is simply a breath of fresh air. Suddenly I don't feel so alone. Thank you

    • @wendyd8826
      @wendyd8826 Před 8 měsíci

      Same. Diagnosed at 42.

    • @joycebrewer4150
      @joycebrewer4150 Před 5 měsíci +1

      😊 Grew up rural, loved nature from little on.

  • @SharpDesign
    @SharpDesign Před rokem +52

    Seriously felt when he said about the market being an overstimulation. Somehow harder when you know it's coming. I wanted to walk away and I'm not even there.

  • @linden5165
    @linden5165 Před rokem +66

    The sensory joy and comfort are wonderful. I marvel at things like dew drops on moss, the wind in trees, the patterns of waves, and my neurotypical friends and families just don't see it, but autistic friends do. For the bad stuff - I limit exposure, use ear plugs, sunglasses etc. It helps. I wouldn't change how I am, but I would change some social space design. I think it would benefit us all to have more sensory-friendly spaces and that there are things that impact non-autistic people too, it's just less obvious.

    • @thatrunningirl
      @thatrunningirl Před 11 měsíci +11

      the hyper fixation of intricate details is why i'm a poet and creative writer :) i hope you are coping well!

    • @PeppermintPatties
      @PeppermintPatties Před 20 dny

      Same. :)x
      I'm much more in tune with the natural world and its rhythms than the human-made world and all its stresses and pressures. It's too fast for me.

    • @kellydalstok8900
      @kellydalstok8900 Před 20 dny

      I’m neurotypical, at least I think I am, and I love those things too; the sound and smell of the sea, bees humming among the flowers, looking at the clouds or the stars.
      In summer I often go cycling, and there is nothing I like better than cycling through the meadows and being completely on my own. It helped me tremendously after my son died, because I often couldn’t bear to be in the company of other people.

  • @amandad8899
    @amandad8899 Před rokem +90

    I truly wish this full program was available outside of the UK. I’ve watched every clip multiple times already and would love to see the entire documentary.

    • @Zopicloned
      @Zopicloned Před rokem +9

      I recently went from doing gardening therapy to doing a very strenuous training course involving hiking, mountain biking, canoeing and manual labour. Yet, I am way less stressed despite having sore muscles! Because I can walk to this place instead of getting the bus. I'd rather be physically tired than mentally tired

    • @lisabyrne8839
      @lisabyrne8839 Před rokem

      ​@@wlj344it dosent work outside the UK...

    • @ryansta
      @ryansta Před rokem +7

      Would using a VPN not allow you to view the series ?

    • @mercytheclown2753
      @mercytheclown2753 Před 8 měsíci

      Is not in Netflix or Discovery Chanel Plus?

    • @llewellynjones1115
      @llewellynjones1115 Před 8 měsíci

      @@ryansta Yes

  • @lexruptor
    @lexruptor Před rokem +44

    This is pretty accurate. We are aware of everything all the time.

  • @Edangiolino
    @Edangiolino Před rokem +32

    yes!! thats why i hate noise, but also i love the sound of the wind and rain and birds and all of nature and why i write poems about it. this is my experience in everyway. I freak out in supermarkets and towns and cities and artificial places. The sounds of nature are balenced. My worst sound is leaf blowers and chain saws. It makes me feel so overwhelmed its untrue. I need low sensory at home and around me.

    • @monsieurVi
      @monsieurVi Před 6 měsíci +1

      Can I read some of your poems anywhere on the web? Thank you!

    • @TheBanana93
      @TheBanana93 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I am autistic and a gardener and I like using the blowers but at the same time I am always anxious and nervous because I presume everyone is going to be as disturbed by the sound as me : D Its funny though loud traffic urgh, metal concert? Hell yeah!

  • @alyaalicekiki1332
    @alyaalicekiki1332 Před rokem +21

    I got diagnosed Autistic @ 37, , growing up NT ( Neurotypical ) I had to learn to be okay with certain situations like a busy world and I remember my parents getting me my first Walkman that was it , I used / still use loud music to calm me in busy, loud situations. Everything is better and easier, when I am plugged into sound / music in my ears.. I hate shopping or traveling without being plugged in.. I also don’t like being in situations that are too quiet because sudden noises seem so loud , so even at home I use headphones to drown out noise.

  • @jmfs3497
    @jmfs3497 Před 10 měsíci +9

    I used to get headaches as a child when my mother walked us through perfume departments even briefly. I go to a small grocery store co-op, instead of a big store. I shop at a tiny hardware store, instead of big box stores. I get sensory joy from playing music, or hearing music in machinery, or listening to wildlife, but humans I tire of very quickly.

  • @doodlenoodlex
    @doodlenoodlex Před rokem +48

    I’m an illustrator who’s autistic; I hate sudden noises and certain textures in food and change in routine. I’m only 20 and an afab trans person and accepted I was autistic at 18 years old. My way of managing “everyday life” is by wearing headphones with my favourite music on, wearing my favourite clothes and having a to do list. I sometimes want to draw what everything feels like. And like Chris, going to a market creates mass sensory overload; the noise of lots of people shopping and the occasional yell of someone promoting their goods and the intense gathering of colour and the crowded area. It’s overwhelming but I love going to markets that have a stall with my special interests on; I love music especially collecting CDs so if I know a market has a music stall I will try and go to it :)

    • @unicorntomboy9736
      @unicorntomboy9736 Před rokem

      Aren't CDs a bit antiquated nowadays? The majority of people use streaming like Spotify for music nowadays and don't care about physical media in current year.
      It's a very hipster thing to do, I guess

    • @doodlenoodlex
      @doodlenoodlex Před rokem +5

      @@unicorntomboy9736 yes but I love CDs for that reason. It makes it more exciting for me. Apparently, portable cd players are becoming more fashionable too

    • @unicorntomboy9736
      @unicorntomboy9736 Před rokem +2

      @@doodlenoodlex Well if you like them, then fine good for you and more power to you

    • @djdusted6485
      @djdusted6485 Před rokem +2

      ​@@unicorntomboy9736 damn, cds described as antiques. I don't own any cds but I still buy vinyl.

    • @thatrunningirl
      @thatrunningirl Před 11 měsíci +1

      i'm a creative writer with autism and the same issues! thanks for making me feel less alone

  • @tracylocke6184
    @tracylocke6184 Před 10 měsíci +9

    I hope this explanation will help people understand autistic children having meltdowns in supermarkets. As a parent of 2 autistic children. I remember the shame I felt as people tutted and commented while my youngest particularly, screamed and shouted in the shops. That was before we had a diagnosis of course.

  • @biohackshq4072
    @biohackshq4072 Před 8 měsíci +11

    Understanding and supporting individuals on the spectrum is a step towards creating a more inclusive and empathetic world. Keep up the great work!

  • @jasonwoods3711
    @jasonwoods3711 Před rokem +15

    Gee I can totally relate to this ...
    Supermarkets are a nightmare for me I can hear everyone and everything in any size room ...
    My sense of smell is mind blowing too !
    I've had to move to the countryside because road noise where I lived was giving me migraines...
    woodlands are havens because the sounds are beautifully calming !.

  • @satyasyasatyasya5746
    @satyasyasatyasya5746 Před rokem +36

    Its also worth noting that there's a certain smuggling-in of "defaultness" or "correctness" when it comes to what 'neurotypicals' experience or how they operate. What they call "blocking out" or "focus" some might call "situationally unaware" or even "lazy/oblivious." It isn't uncommon that this "blocking-out" actually works against people such as with public thefts or saftey issues.
    Basically, I'm sceptical that this 'oversensitivity' is even a flaw or fault given that if places and people weren't quite so horrible in the first place, would it even come-up?

    • @reeveharper6061
      @reeveharper6061 Před rokem +11

      I see your point but as an autistic person, who's thought a lot about this, I can tellyou it would still be a problem.
      Thunder storms can be painful. Certain clothing, for example wool or felt, can make my skin feel like it's burning.
      I get meltdowns from the heat in the summer.
      Obviously if people weren't always forcing us to eat or wear certain things or go certain places that would make life so much easier. However, we would still be disabled.

    • @satyasyasatyasya5746
      @satyasyasatyasya5746 Před rokem +3

      @@reeveharper6061 In those cases, perhaps you have a point of some kind, but I'm talking about most (and I hate even using this word but) 'mild' cases etc.

    • @BobofMIB
      @BobofMIB Před rokem +5

      ​@@satyasyasatyasya5746 I usually think of it as being a difference in attention regulation which can be enabling in certain circumstances and disabling in others relative to a neurotypical person. Some places like supermarkets I find really difficult particularly when I'm tired, but give me something to research or a problem to solve and I can focus easily on that often to the point where I'm oblivious to everything else.

    • @reeveharper6061
      @reeveharper6061 Před rokem +6

      @Satyasya Satyasya uhm according to the health care workers who have assessed me my autism is "mild". I lead an independent life, I can drive and I get high grades and my autism is still always disabling to some degree, regardless of the people around me.

    • @jliller
      @jliller Před rokem

      If 95% of people are a certain way, it IS the default, regardless of whether the other 5% are suffering from a defect or are experiencing the next stage in human evolution.

  • @PacyMitchEditz
    @PacyMitchEditz Před rokem +20

    I'm autistic

  • @OperationDarkside
    @OperationDarkside Před rokem +13

    Can confirm. I once didn't leave the house for about a month. Not because I wanted, but because I had to due to the sensory input outside. The modern world isn't very friendly to the autistic experience, although I would argue, that it isn't very friendly to neurotypical people either.

  • @flannerymonaghan-morris4825
    @flannerymonaghan-morris4825 Před 5 měsíci +7

    I still am a mystery to myself.
    I was one of those people who got diagnosed with autism young-I was 2 years old when I was diagnosed. I am now 24.
    I haven’t had a real meltdown in a looooong time (it used to be worse when I was younger), and honestly, talking about masking and overstimulation is very relatable to me.
    When I was younger, I used to become overstimulated during parties and in crowds and rooms with little kids-I’ve learned to handle it a lot better than before. I used to be scared of the blender, hand dryer, or anything sudden-which has gotten better over the years, and I wouldn’t wear clothing that was itchy with a tag in the back. I have sensitivity issues in regards to people putting things in my ear or in my eyes. I didn’t like it when certain songs were on the radio that I did not like (much more of a rock and roll gal than pop). I think I was much more severe when it comes to public places when I was younger compared to now.
    I’ve been fine with the market relatively well. Never really have been overstimulated there.
    Surprisingly enough, I can handle some loud noises that I prefer just fine (I love rock concerts) and all that…

    • @Suzie-OT
      @Suzie-OT Před měsícem

      Hi, I’m an Occupational Therapy Student in my final year at University and I have a teaching session using a focus area. I chose young people aged 15-25 with ASD and transitioning into employment because there is a lot of stigma, lack of employment opportunities and support with modern adjustments. Would you consider giving me some of your time to answer some questions? I have ADHD and I have a child with ADHD and Autism, so this is super important that we get some information out there directly. If this would be ok? Id love to put a set of questions to you and see how you either felt gaining employment or how you still feel about it and how as professionals and society we could ensure the pay gaps and opportunities are there in equal amounts and in a way you do not need to suppress your own needs. Would you be interested in sharing your story?

  • @zennomad258
    @zennomad258 Před rokem +4

    More needs to be done to support autistic individuals who have endured for many years without a formal diagnosis.

  • @hazaodenorth329
    @hazaodenorth329 Před rokem +7

    Such an Amazing show... It's a pity I can only find snippets on CZcams...

  • @wendyd8826
    @wendyd8826 Před 8 měsíci +4

    This completely explains how I feel. I need an absolute sensory break after doing my groceries or shopping.

    • @user-vm9we7fs4d
      @user-vm9we7fs4d Před 5 měsíci

      Lazy

    • @zenderpearl
      @zenderpearl Před 3 dny

      @@user-vm9we7fs4d you are clearly a troll, replying to other peoples comments with lazy insults instead of making an actual argument. hope you are mentally okay. wendy: dont let others bring you down, if you need to have a 'sensory break' then its nothing to be ashamed of, and its not your fault. i experience the same thing. just do what you need to do

  • @thatrunningirl
    @thatrunningirl Před 11 měsíci +7

    thanks to the BBC for encouraging acceptance and educating the masses on autism. i was late diagnosed 5 years ago, when i was 32. i'm 37 now and have had to essentially relearn who i am. or rather, accept who i am. i've been self-employed 11 years and i'm a successful creative writer. i've also run 29 marathons. but somehow i couldn't walk down a busy high street without wanting to cry. the sounds, smells, unpredictability of people. contrasting signs / colours / fonts etc. i thought i was going mad. then slowly i started to piece together my life struggles - from when i was a young teenager, and it all became abundantly clear. the hyper fixations, the sensory intensity, the struggles with friendships / relationships / being misunderstood. i'm hoping this show underlines to people the importance of accepting invisible conditions. too many times has autism been portrayed as a children with learning difficulties. while they obviously have a place too, there are millions of people like me who are 'high functioning' and just left to get on with it. if you're autistic - i highly recommend 'adult with autism' podcast / youtube and private therapy if you can afford it, NHS wait list if you can't X

  • @paulgrant7393
    @paulgrant7393 Před 4 měsíci +1

    Chris Packham is doing for Autism what Steven Fry has done for Depression and Bipolar disorder what an incredible person!

  • @dubulvr
    @dubulvr Před 8 měsíci

    I really love this program. It makes me feel so seen and understood which I don’t get a lot here😭 @3:10 he’s so real I literally love the comforting feeling I get when I’m in nature or near nature(?) i can’t describe it but the wind, sound of the trees, birds, etc make me so warm

  • @kimpreston3628
    @kimpreston3628 Před rokem +7

    This is fascinating.
    Thank you

    • @angelinasouren
      @angelinasouren Před rokem

      Yes, it is...! I am not autistic, but the sound of an animal eating or of a bird grinding its bill, I find that highly enjoyable, though for me that may be because I know that it means that the animal is content. I've always loved the sound of rain, too. You don't have to be autistic for that, but if you think a little about what this lecturer just said about how someone who's autistic said that immensely enjoys the sound of the feet of geese on fresh snow, you can start to get a glimpse of what he meant.

  • @lydiaklimek8594
    @lydiaklimek8594 Před 6 měsíci

    I love the sound of water. Waterfalls, rivers, waves against the shore. It’s very nice.

  • @lovelyenglishnature3277
    @lovelyenglishnature3277 Před 11 měsíci +5

    What annoys me is that a market isn’t a natural environment for a human. Nature is natural and our heightened sensitivity is useful in this environment. Yet as usual it’s autistics who are wrong 🙄🙄🙄. I find that I can block things out more easily when I’m with someone…if I’m on my own I can’t cope with a busy shopping centre but if I take someone with me I’m ok.

  • @wendyrussell4191
    @wendyrussell4191 Před měsícem

    I love the sound of waves and the feel of the sea as it was a lack of responsibility and being parentless out there, feeling all the sensory noises and knowing there is safety away from everything

  • @logicalameetsworld
    @logicalameetsworld Před rokem

    His words about acceptance are highly welcomed.

  • @peteracton2246
    @peteracton2246 Před rokem +3

    Both programmes were excellent. I didn't expect them to be. The BBC do love their anchormen, however Chris has done more, in my humble opinion, around autism than all his narrating over frolicking badgers. Nice one Chris and The Open University too.

  • @JDMimeTHEFIRST
    @JDMimeTHEFIRST Před 8 měsíci

    I can relate so much to this. I love touch, smells of dirt and trees, the ocean, the sound of wind. I do think neurotypicals seem to be so numb to it. They also aren’t bothered by loud bass, repetitive sounds, high pitch sounds, etc.

  • @DGAIRELAND
    @DGAIRELAND Před 8 měsíci +2

    I have autism, i was having an awful time in school and had to come out. My special interests are very special to me and i feel hurt if anyone question them. Nature is a place that in my opinion, seems more tolerant of different neuro types than places like cities or other manmade places

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 7 měsíci

      Yes that's why my grandfather was advised in 19920 s to but a smallholding what were in today

  • @LilChuunosuke
    @LilChuunosuke Před měsícem

    I'm 26 and autistic. I am most sensitive to sound, but I suffer from chronic pain largely in response to my sensitivity to bright lights.
    It's so hard spending time with my non-autistic friends. They always want to take me to bright, noisy places that overwhelm my brain. I went to a busy restaurant yesterday for the first time since discovering I was autistic (I've always generally avoided them, so I haven't been to one in years) and I started to disassociate in the middle of my breakfast because I was so overwhelmed with the onslaught of noise.
    That being said, even with all my sensory pains, I feel bad for them for not being able to enjoy the world the same way I do. Its worth the pain. Especially when I'm out in nature. I visit my local state park every single weekend as long as it is sunny. I am well known in my area as someone who always wears headphones in public. It helps me drown out sensory pains with more pleasant sounds. But when I visit my local park, putting headphones on is out of the question. I need to hear the waves lapping along the shoreline, the leaves rustling in the trees, the birds cawing, the rabbits racing through the brush, etc. I feel so profoundly at peace when I am out in nature. I could spend hours out there with my sketchbook, drawing whatever catches my eye. When I manage to drag my allistic friends to the park with me, it's hard for me not to feel a twinge of pity. They wouldn't be so bored if they could see and hear all the beautiful things I was experiencing.

  • @babs66
    @babs66 Před rokem +10

    He explained very well but could have also mentioned how some auties make noise to block out other noises. Echolalia feeds into this.

    • @therespectedlex9794
      @therespectedlex9794 Před 8 měsíci

      Echolalia is the repeating of a noise or word, possibly phrase. To most people pointless, strange and out of context. That's if they don't understand how a person's autism affects them.

  • @ricciread1184
    @ricciread1184 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Perfume/aftershave feels like a punch in the face and I get really angry and need to remind myself that it isn't an assult.
    Also used to hardly eat as well because of textures and smells of food

  • @mariemac5347
    @mariemac5347 Před rokem +2

    Really interesting, thank you

  • @ojb1044
    @ojb1044 Před rokem +1

    Yes iexperiences like this can be challenging and overloading, but t is also exciting and stimulating like going to a funfair. I go in for the experience now and then but avoid as a routine that overloads. You can choose to enjoy powerful sensations while avoiding those that totally overload.

  • @lindadunn2031
    @lindadunn2031 Před 6 měsíci

    I don't know if I am autistic. I have never been diagnosed but when you showed the way you see trees, it may me think how I see lines in everything (windows walls etc..) I just have to try and join them all up with a single line and have done so all my life. I thought everyone did this. I have never really had friends because I find it so stressful to have to be social situations (and yet I became a manager never really quite sure how I did this but it really took a toll on me and led to alcoholism. I have 5 autistic grandchildren. I am only half way through the first episode and had a mini melt down as I call them. I asked my dad if as a kid did I walk or run on my tippy toes all the time and he said yes I did. 3 of my grandchildren did this. I have always preferred books and my own company. Also I hate music especially bass noise it makes me feel like my head will explode.

  • @-Ray_Moon-
    @-Ray_Moon- Před 7 měsíci +1

    As a young naturalist who’s very much hoping to get a job in nature, and is currently trying to get an autism diagnosis, Chris for me is probably the kind of person I aspire to be- I met him at a bird watching event when I was a little kid, I think there’s an awkward looking picture of me with him somewhere (it’s evident that neither of us particularly like photos haha).

  • @MrZrazies
    @MrZrazies Před 8 měsíci

    I’m deaf and I’m HFA and ADHD. Sensory is one thing that’s overload for me. Everyday outside in stores. Social. It just make me looking around too much. Always looking. Looking. Not just like can chill and rest. When I had episodes. I didn’t realize that I was hiding in small spaces where my girlfriend would find me. Few times I would hide in bath tub with lights off.. Eventually she’ll calm me down. Anyway I really wish I could able to hear sometimes you know. Like they said about hearing wind on trees. Hearing water running things like that.

  • @diggingscotlandspast7478

    Havent been diagnosed as ive chosen not to but im the same , going to busy places is fine for maybe 10 minutes then i just want to go home, i feel like i cant think and i panic about multiple situations that could happen and over think things . I love being away in nature, all my hobbies are focused in nature, i get a sense of peacefulness that i cant experience anywhere else a sort of euphoria where i ca 4:15 n feel i can finally breathe .

  • @RioRav
    @RioRav Před 9 měsíci +1

    I'm autistic and I actually struggled following what the interviewer and interviewee were saying because of the background noises and movement and that was without the smells, lights and other sensory input that being there in real life would've caused.

  • @LegendoftheGalacticHero
    @LegendoftheGalacticHero Před měsícem

    This has been my experience ever since I can remember, specially smells and noises. Food textures is also a tricky one. I recently got a not Covid virus that made me lose my sense of smell and taste and I was surprised at how easier it was suddently to eat and not be bothered by certain sensations.

  • @rederickfroders1978
    @rederickfroders1978 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Im slightly autistic but I also have sensory overload from sights, sounds, thoughts. Its not that I cant take it, its that all of this is just really taxing to my brain. I am always tired or on edge because of our capitalistic consumer world.
    I am very empathetic though. The saying that autists are sociopaths is wrong.
    Baseline is that I'm always so aware and busy with everything that I'm absolutely tired really quickly.
    Theres so much to think about, and you want to think about everything, but that is actually not a healthy thing to do.
    I work for max 20 hours a week and even though I am smart and talented, I really could not do more than 20 hours.

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 2 měsíci

      It's because this world is man made and not for us

  • @JonjoSwinn
    @JonjoSwinn Před měsícem +2

    I am autistic , but do have really good senses and I am only 10 years old , at least I’m unique and from me from living a good life 😊❤.

    • @zenderpearl
      @zenderpearl Před 3 dny

      im autistic aswell, your attitude is great, remember that you are fantastic and dont ever let other people bring you down

  • @rmrita55
    @rmrita55 Před rokem

    Very informative

  • @hmm-zk2lt
    @hmm-zk2lt Před 2 měsíci

    I felt an immense sense of relief when the supermarket sounds stopped like holy crap... literally like a smoke detector finally shutting up

  • @JonjoSwinn
    @JonjoSwinn Před měsícem +1

    I was diagnosed autistic , when at age (5) I did have some hearing tests and sensory seems not that difficult to me from other people that don’t like

  • @JamieHumeCreative
    @JamieHumeCreative Před rokem

    I definitely experience both. I thought that was common.

  • @annieno1
    @annieno1 Před 2 měsíci

    I get overwhelmed in crowded and noisy places to a degree where I stop seeing and hearing things that is obvious to everyone else. For example, I was waiting in a line with my boyfriend at the time outside of a shopping center. When we got home he said something about an ambulance. What ambulance? Apparently there was someone screaming and an ambulance that showed up right next to the line and I somehow filtered that out completely. But at the same time I felt that i could hear too much of everything around me. Its like tunnel vision but with hearing.

  • @JackAllpikeMusic
    @JackAllpikeMusic Před rokem +1

    man I wish I could watch this show in Australia. :(

  • @buddhastaxi666
    @buddhastaxi666 Před rokem +1

    The instrument with which we perceive also filters certain stimuli.
    To see Eternity in a grain of sand is not a handicap . Its there , the mystery of existence, whether we are cognitive of it or not and besides our spin or level of excitation.
    Being vanilla and masking is not the way to go...let your hair down....after all we are all on the Spectrum.

  • @danielwilliams8346
    @danielwilliams8346 Před 26 dny

    When I was in medical school, I could not stand designated anatomy lab days. Half of the class standing in there chatting in combination with the engulfing smell of formaldehyde, my immediate teammates with their small talk, the lighting, etc., all done while slowly dissecting and guessing what was what. I could hardly pay attention. I did much better during non-designated anatomy lab sessions between myself & 2 others as at least 2 of my irritants were not going on and we had a better idea of what to look for. I tried asking for accommodations, but my professor was like "that is not going to happen" as if I asking for something immoral.

  • @kk-ei5zz
    @kk-ei5zz Před rokem +3

    I have not been diagnosed and so don't want to claim I am autistic, but believe I do exhibit some traits.
    I feel complete sensory sound overload at all times in public spaces, unless they are fairly empty, e.g. an extremely early morning café. Streets, buses, shops of every kind stress me out and I have to rush in and out as quick qs possibly to stop myself getting anxious and stressed. The only way I can enjoy public spaces is if alcohol or bit of a doob is involved (clubs, pubs, bars, etc), but because I am trying to blank out my surroundings I often get very drunk haha!
    I also feel extremely at ease in nature, the smells, sights and especially sounds all seem to come together into some sort of symphany and it almost feels like a delicate tune that finally allows myself to be at ease.
    Furthermore, I have realised throughout life I went from one extreme of being a trouble making daredevil child, to a social recluse and now am probably the most adept at being charasmatic, friendly and sociable of anyone I know, though I had to craft this identity and sort of fake it till I made it, I now feel at peace with this extrovert piece of myself.
    I think I've struggled a lot in my life with balancing the ADD characteristics and autistic aspects of my brain as at time they seem completely parallel to one another - afterall, how can I love to socialise whilst hating social spaces?
    I wish there were better facilities and benchmarks in place to identify and give us advice from an earlier age so I might not feel so different and alone as a 10-21 year old. I am now 80% comfortable with it as a 23 year old, but wish there were better insights for well-behaved, intelligent teens that quietly struggle as they are not deemed troublesome.

  • @ebenezergeezer
    @ebenezergeezer Před rokem +1

    Is there a way to watch this series in Canada? I feel it's important but I can't find a way to watch it or buy it.

  • @delilahhart4398
    @delilahhart4398 Před rokem +4

    I'm very easily startled by unexpected noises. I suspect that my grandma was also on the spectrum, and she was the same way. She had a really loud doorbell, and I remember hearing her yell from being startled when we would ring the bell.

  • @penelopeyoung4453
    @penelopeyoung4453 Před měsícem

    I'm diagnosed autistic and think I must have an auditory processing disorder because I can't pick conversations out of the background noise or music, which is why I've never been keen on pubs and parties. Smells can sometimes get to me - although I like to eat fish, the smell of Tesco's fish counter can actually make me retch.

  • @ambere5422
    @ambere5422 Před 9 měsíci

    Im so glad he mentioned sniffing the dog! I personally love the smell of my dog but don't like the smell of other peoples dogs.

  • @commentarytalk1446
    @commentarytalk1446 Před rokem +1

    I wonder what effect, how much time children spend sitting down between four falls in "class rooms" being under-stimulated in their senses, has on them and their development?

  • @annefricker8474
    @annefricker8474 Před 3 měsíci

    Oh goodness I’m not autistic but I couldn’t stand the noise of the place. I do get a feeling of having to get out of such places.
    Going to the countryside is wonderful but going to a shopping mall is torture.

  • @nagarajuchukkala
    @nagarajuchukkala Před měsícem

    I am myself autistic, and I get overwhelmed when I have to focus on things that are around me in all directions and feel calmer if the things are in front of me. But then, I should also mention that one of my eyes is very poor in function, so that could have a part in the play.

  • @BradfortBottlenose
    @BradfortBottlenose Před měsícem

    It also seems to be the case tat while one sense is stronger and results in overstimulation, another can possibly be weaker. I have very sensitive hearing and get overstimulated from lots of noise, but I also have no sense of smell. Why I think this has to do with my autism is because I can still taste just fine.

  • @VeenaLeela
    @VeenaLeela Před 7 měsíci

    Does anyone have any insight about hyper sensitive traits developing as an adult? 20s/30s

  • @CJShopland_Art
    @CJShopland_Art Před rokem +1

    I wouldn’t even be able to hear the conversation in that environment.

  • @StitchesLovesRats
    @StitchesLovesRats Před rokem

    This is why I listen to the musical genius of Thomas Bergersen (and his music production company Two Steps From Hell).
    TSFH has a youtube channel where you can listen to all his stuff.
    Miracles. Away With Your Fairies. Sun and Moon. Made of Air. Stronger Fater Braver.
    You're welcome.

  • @terrileighs5684
    @terrileighs5684 Před 24 dny

    I find the difference between natural sensory experiences and artifical ones radically different.
    One is pleasurable the other is not.

  • @Militairee
    @Militairee Před rokem

    does anyone have a link to the rap video shown on this programme called sensory overload?

  • @delilahhart4398
    @delilahhart4398 Před rokem

    When I was in school, I often didn't eat lunch, because I thought the cafeteria food was gross. I remember nearly vomiting when I just smelled instant potatoes cooking.

  • @Oceanstarz
    @Oceanstarz Před měsícem

    Chris, do you know any excellent Solicitors who deal with the Court of Protection and Judicial Re Judicial Reviews? Fighting for freedom for my Autistic Relative, with Autism myself … a challenge but I’m not giving up ✨⚖ All ideas welcome. And brilliant that you keep pushing forward regardless ⭐

  • @blakeaaron5698
    @blakeaaron5698 Před 4 měsíci

    Folks interested in understanding more about this topic, research polyvagal theory and somatic experiencing.

  • @josharvin6239
    @josharvin6239 Před rokem

    Yay!!

  • @adambartlett6277
    @adambartlett6277 Před 4 měsíci

    It's crazy how differently people experience the same world

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes and when you think we all see the same

  • @RG-jj7yz
    @RG-jj7yz Před rokem +4

    Could Dr Luke Beard (the one in this video) contact me please about a man who has undiagnosed autism and William's syndrome kept as his father's slave in diabolical conditions all his life and now in his 50's. I am desperate to help but am hundreds of miles away and am kept out of the vacuum due to the father's coercive control. Father now insane and keeping son in his (father's - hoarding deathtrap).
    Thank you. R.

    • @camellia8625
      @camellia8625 Před rokem

      I suggest you try and contact him through Sheffield Uni

  • @largedoglover99
    @largedoglover99 Před rokem +6

    I believe the non autistic person hears and smells just fine - the difference may be the sounds and smells are expected so they are not irritating our senses. screaming and crying and bad smells bother most people

  • @HeavenScent2110
    @HeavenScent2110 Před měsícem

    I had issue listening to the end of this when the music was starting to

  • @spicybaguette7706
    @spicybaguette7706 Před měsícem

    0:24 Literally me when I enter any crowded place lmaooo

  • @SonnyDarvishzadeh
    @SonnyDarvishzadeh Před 10 měsíci

    I just discovered that I have many of the neurodiversity traits and exploring more.

  • @zaroffhound
    @zaroffhound Před 11 měsíci

    The prosaic world, mundane & chaste of attitude or temperament, has so little room for the vast poetry of the uncertain.

  • @naxoux2023
    @naxoux2023 Před 10 měsíci

    I am autistic, I live in Chile, I am a professional, with specialized courses and I feel that this country is never going to give me a space to enhance my talents or anything...I want to have an opportunity, that someone sees potential in me and takes me out from this hole

  • @andrewwilliams9580
    @andrewwilliams9580 Před 10 měsíci

    I'm on the spectrum (diagnosed in 1996). Sometimes, I feel it borders onto other illnesses. During queues, traffic, crowds, I become egocentric. I tell myself and close friends "I'm above this. This is beneath me. We're better than this". I think egoccentrism as I don't feel the need to manipulate others like marcissists do. I even think things like "this dull grey British weather is on par with these nobodys while a blue-skied Mediterranean climate would be more on par with myself".

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 2 měsíci

      Yes I have fybromyalgia because if the autism heds more feeling there

  • @quiettornado1970
    @quiettornado1970 Před rokem

    age is a factor also. Mine is hyper smell.

  • @olenick9590
    @olenick9590 Před 6 měsíci

    Sensory processing disorder is diagnosed by occupational therapists, not psychologists so i wonder are many autistics actually SPD (needing sensory modulation support)? Or is spd and autism the same thing just with different lens labels

  • @raoz2324
    @raoz2324 Před měsícem

    Por fin lo encontré: Pecos Paul Kelee

  • @ian_occultist
    @ian_occultist Před 2 měsíci

    Anyone else here freak out in wide open spaces like big fields with windmills or high places with no trees, voids, planes etc? Give me a fireplace or forest and I'll just sit there for days not caring about anything.

  • @Dragonfly-tm3md
    @Dragonfly-tm3md Před 3 měsíci

    I wonder if it is the modern world that can be unnatural to humans who are sensitive? For instance, all the lights, sounds of traffic, adverts, signs and man made things trying to get your attention. But all the detail in a natural space will fill you up rather than aggravate you.

  • @corrigana1
    @corrigana1 Před 5 měsíci

    I have a learning disability partially sighted and autism

  • @aaroncarlin3074
    @aaroncarlin3074 Před 9 měsíci

    It's making me sick. I absolutely despise being autistic. With every fibre of my being. I hate being in pain 😭

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 2 měsíci

      Do you have fybromyalgia pain hypomobility?

  • @XRMTTF
    @XRMTTF Před rokem

    In my experience, I think Dr. Luke was wrong when he put the words into Chris's mouth, saying he was "seeking" the stimuli out in nature. It's just simply a better place to be if you can't filter shit out. Wouldn't you rather be in a comfortable environment where you don't have to work constantly to endure random sounds, lights, smells, etc? "I think what you're describing is a conscious effort of sensory seeking. If you identified something that soothes you gives you joy gives you comfort then you're then going to be hyperaware of that"... No. I am hyperaware of EVERYTHING and would simply prefer to be in an environment that isn't a hellscape, for obvious reasons. "Sensory Seeking" is different like the example he gave of sniffing the dog. That's something a person does, it's not just an environment they place themselves in... I wish I could watch this whole show. I'm trying to be polite here but Dr. Luke is simply wrong lol

    • @camellia8625
      @camellia8625 Před rokem

      Chris didn’t disagree.

    • @XRMTTF
      @XRMTTF Před rokem

      @@camellia8625 If I was him in this situation I also would not speak up

    • @lisaflude9368
      @lisaflude9368 Před 6 měsíci

      He isn't wrong, I love going out to my woods with my dog as it is sensory seeking, the sounds are relaxing, the smells are different and I could sit there all day in quiet. Thay is sensory seeking. But so is having a heavy blanket on you for pressure, or listening to a type of music. It is a very personal thing to each individual. So to say that isn't sensory seeking is wrong.

  • @hispoiema
    @hispoiema Před rokem +1

    I had no idea a non autistic person could blaock a huge amount of stimulation out. I thought they were just more able to deal with it. Maybe that is what is meant (?)

  • @turtleanton6539
    @turtleanton6539 Před rokem

    Wow

  • @CyberspacedLoner
    @CyberspacedLoner Před rokem

    I have lived with autism for 43 years

  • @franceslock1662
    @franceslock1662 Před rokem

    It’s a two edged sword. It seems like a contradiction. Loud sounds can be distressing to the same person who gets intense gratification from high pitched sound they make with their voice. This person taps diverse surfaces listening with their ear next to it for the sound in a sensory seeking behavior. Unfortunately there is a refusal to diagnose these precious children with ASD due to longer term funding implications. As children get older they have a right to know if they have autism, and be proud of how they are differently abled.

  • @wilddestroyer8927
    @wilddestroyer8927 Před 10 měsíci

    I'm autistic and I'm not hypersensitive to any senses as far as I'm aware

    • @RioRav
      @RioRav Před 9 měsíci +2

      It's a spectrum, some are in fact hyposensitive, there can also be switching.

    • @VeenaLeela
      @VeenaLeela Před 7 měsíci

      @@RioRavHi, can you explain what you mean by switching? I’m asking because to my memory my sensory experience was suppressed as a child (probably due to trauma) in my late 20’s I started to become hyper sensitive and with age it seems to just get stronger. I find it to be a blessing and also a ‘curse’ only depending on how I interact with the environment.

  • @cocopopcoven
    @cocopopcoven Před 2 měsíci

    No wonder no one in our household is anywhere near as persistently enthusiastic about sniffing our dog ppppffffffff

  • @Autism_Forever
    @Autism_Forever Před 10 měsíci

    I LOVE severe storms. Rainstorms windstorms and snowstorms. They scatter neurotypicals and the world becomes lovely. Earthquakes not so much. Earthquakes make neurotypicals scream even louder than usual.

  • @buddhastaxi666
    @buddhastaxi666 Před rokem

    All of us are in the Spectrum, but some of us are looking at the gossamer threads of star light illuminating a grove of trees, breathing and exhaling the night air, as their skirts of branches, like petticoats, rise and fall.

  • @NormyTres
    @NormyTres Před 7 měsíci

    It's actually hard to listen to what they're saying with all the noise going on.

  • @kerrimchayle1213
    @kerrimchayle1213 Před rokem +1

    Now I want to go test if I'm autistic. Oh brother!

    • @jasonclarke7422
      @jasonclarke7422 Před rokem +2

      I was diagnosed with ASD 6 years ago when I was 42, and I felt so liberated when I found out why I have felt so different to other people my whole life. If you think that you have Autism go to your GP and get them to refer you for an ASD assessment, it will truly change your life as you can learn strategies to help deal with this.

    • @linden5165
      @linden5165 Před rokem +1

      @@jasonclarke7422 I was diagnosed at 42 as well. It was amazing to have my whole life make sense for the first time and to know how to meet my needs from then on.

    • @jasonclarke7422
      @jasonclarke7422 Před rokem

      @@linden5165 After my diagnosis I realised how tough I had been on myself my whole life trying to live up to everyone else's expectations, it's no wonder a lot of people are getting diagnosed later in life, personally I think that I had burned myself out. These days I am much kinder on myself and make sure that I get plenty of rest when it is needed and stay away from anything I know will cause me a lot of stress. I'm very lucky living in the New Forest so being amongst nature really helps me to de-stress. The only thing that there is nothing I can do about is having to work full time but again I am lucky to have a job that I enjoy supporting people with L/D and mental health issues which I find very rewarding.

    • @linden5165
      @linden5165 Před rokem +2

      @@jasonclarke7422 I relate to so much of that, the expectations, the burnout, the lack of self-compassion. I am not certain I would have even survived much longer on the trajectory I was on. I'm so much safer now, and my wellbeing is better all around. I love nature too, so much.

    • @tomsale5142
      @tomsale5142 Před 2 měsíci

      ​@@jasonclarke7422do you have pain from it