Autistic Speech Patterns [CC]

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  • čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
  • Autism, the DSM, and Capitalism - • Where Did The DSM Come...
    About a year ago I made a video about the intersection between neurodiversity and literature (you can watch it here - • Neurodiversity and Lit... ) and in that video we briefly talked about different speech patterns more typically seen in neurodivergent people
    I always intended to make a followup video more about all of the different speech patterns and it kept getting pushed off but here it is! We did it!
    Also now that we've talked about it here I think I'm going to stop editing out my speech impediment unless what I'm saying makes zero sense cause I think it's an important part of representation (I was always nervous that having it visible online would make people think I can't say lines in a script in a show normally even though that's not how a lot of speech impediments work in the slightest but anyway, you know what, screw it, let's be authentic)
    Sources & Resources!:
    Roman Jakobson reading - courses.nus.edu.sg/course/ell...
    “The autism voice” - disabilityinkidlit.com/2015/0...
    Speech development & processing - / gemmajuneslp
    A study on the sound of autistic speech - www.frontiersin.org/articles/...
    Speech patterns - www.autismparentingmagazine.c...
    Autism and speech disorders - www.autism.org.uk/advice-and-...
    ------------------
    Autism Resources:
    Ultimate resource guide - www.disabledautisticlesbian.c...
    How to support an autistic person - www.disabledautisticlesbian.c...
    Help! I think I’m autistic - www.disabledautisticlesbian.c...
    Unmasking/How to Start Over - www.disabledautisticlesbian.c...
    ------------------
    Hey! I just had an album come out! You can check it out here - disabledautisticlesbian.com/rewrite-history
    Also a new EP you can check out here - • Bold full
    If you want to support me financially, you can…
    Buy me a smoothie! - www.paypal.com/paypalme/sydne...
    ------------------
    My Music:
    Alive (Single) - li.sten.to/alive
    Start Over (Album) - li.sten.to/start-over
    The Confused Linguist (Album) - li.sten.to/the-confused-linguist
    Find me on Bandcamp - sydneyzarlengo.bandcamp.com/m...
    Check out my #ActuallyAutistic playlist made of entirely autistic artists!
    open.spotify.com/playlist/3gI...
    ------------------
    Hello my dears!
    My name is Sydney and I’m an actor/singer-songwriter who writes music about my experiences being autistic, disabled, gay, gender fluid and in general, a human. My goal is to fill musical gaps and write about things people often forget to make music about. I’m also a vintage enthusiast and disability advocate (among other things). I’ve now released 3 albums and, most importantly, my favorite color is buttercup yellow.
    ------------------
    Find me on...
    Facebook - / sydney-zarlengo-110498...
    Instagram - / disabled.autistic.lesbian
    Website - www.disabledautisticlesbian.com/
    Email - disabled.autistic.lesbian@gmail.com
    ------------------

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @HobGungan
    @HobGungan Před rokem +839

    The whole "losing the ability to speak when overwhelmed or exhausted" thing directly happened to me just last night when my ex cornered me for a "discussion" when I was trying to go to bed...
    Several times I was trying to push words out and got stuck on "I..I..I..I..I.."

    • @heedmydemands
      @heedmydemands Před rokem +34

      Doesn't sound like a nice time to be cornered for a discussion. If u r anything like me u were probably going to bed because otherwise u would have fallen down from exhaustion

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před rokem +35

      It surprised me a bit that so many people who have a hard time getting their words out describe it like that. I'd always felt like I had this wall that was between my tongue and my words and over time I got better at pushing them through the wall and out the mouth, but it tends to lead to the words being blurted out even though it's exactly what I intended to say and normally I would just say it. As opposed to blurting things out because you're trying not to say them at all.

    • @recoveringsoul755
      @recoveringsoul755 Před rokem +39

      My now ex would deliberately torment me until I was running words together. He enjoyed getting a reaction from me and exasperating me. He complained about my monotone voice, would force me to do prolonged eye contact...ugh

    • @HobGungan
      @HobGungan Před rokem +40

      @@recoveringsoul755 That cruel intent hurts and enrages me exponentially more than the actions themselves, and it always has. Did you get the "cute when you're angry" shtick or the "I'm just trying to help you be better" line? Or both? I've gotten both. Either way, it's just a bully exerting control and I'm glad you got away from that.

    • @recoveringsoul755
      @recoveringsoul755 Před rokem +14

      @@HobGungan I didn't know I was autistic then. Or that he is likely a narcissist or worse

  • @Lysandra_Bouquet
    @Lysandra_Bouquet Před rokem +359

    I'm legally blind and wanted to say I really appreciate you describing what you look like. Love the pigtails. Also loved the video

    • @Linnz
      @Linnz Před 9 měsíci +18

      I've not seen one single video where this was done. How lovely!!

    • @NIKNAK1
      @NIKNAK1 Před 8 měsíci +9

      Ive seen this done on zoom calls and always thought it was odd… but when being told why I thought it was amazing…. we often don’t think of these things because they don’t effect us…. we really need to consider others and do what we can to make their experience and life more accessible so we’re on a more level playing field… everyone deserves the same life experiences and entertainment…your comment helps others see that this is something that is helpful and yes people do benefit from this….

    • @chrisx1197
      @chrisx1197 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Sorry to hear dude, hope your doing well.

    • @b3astlyify
      @b3astlyify Před 16 dny

      How did you type this comment? Serious question

  • @reaganharder1480
    @reaganharder1480 Před rokem +375

    I don't know that I'm autistic, but some of these speech patterns are very familiar to me. Namely, forgetting basic words and substituting them with non-word sounds. What's incredible to me is how often people can still understand what I mean. Like, I'll be working on something and need a certain tool and be like "hey can you pass me the... herbadeberp" and the guy i'm working with just goes and grabs the right tool for me.

    • @ItsJustAdrean
      @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem +58

      Legitimately, I imitate the dingbang of whatever the tool does, and somehow I am understood. Blows my mind

    • @odinentertainment1079
      @odinentertainment1079 Před rokem +37

      Humans are very sympathetic, I don't think I am autistic at all, but something I notice a lot is that when I struggle with remembering a specific word, others will struggle too when I ask "whats that word when such-and-such happens" when I suspect if i just plainly asked them they would quickly find it. We both have the word in the backs of our mind now. Have you experienced this?

    • @odinentertainment1079
      @odinentertainment1079 Před rokem +13

      Or rather, if they had at that same instance wanted to use that word it would have been no problem. But because they are tuned into you it takes them a minute to recall that word

    • @reaganharder1480
      @reaganharder1480 Před rokem +17

      @@odinentertainment1079 oh yeah, been there many times. I'm not sure if it's more a sympathetic response or the brain being suddenly asked to recall a specific word when not in speach mode, but 100% i've had that many times

    • @corvus_da
      @corvus_da Před rokem +5

      Maybe it's because they see what you're doing and know what tool you need for it?

  • @matthollywood8060
    @matthollywood8060 Před rokem +438

    I'm noticing that your sentences often have nested clauses within clauses, digressions and explanations. It's very complicated and enjoyable to hear. I feel like I do the same thing and am constantly worried that most people won't be able to follow where my sentences are going and will miss my point.

    • @flavourruling2162
      @flavourruling2162 Před rokem +81

      You’d be surprised that people actually follow those tangents well, the trouble comes from tripping yourself up and forgetting where you were, what you said, or even forgetting the entire story for a moment - then they remind you the part just before what you said, and then you keep going with it - albeit a little more stressed out because you just spent 3 minutes setting up a point, and now you have completely forgotten, wasting 6 minutes in total between two people

    • @matthollywood8060
      @matthollywood8060 Před rokem +42

      @@flavourruling2162 I know that one. The other thing I've been noticing more about myself lately is that I just have no idea how to end a conversation. I usually just realize everything necessary has been said and quietly drift away. I feel like most people have a better idea of the beginnings and endings of interactions.

    • @barbarusbloodshed6347
      @barbarusbloodshed6347 Před rokem +23

      You should start learning German. Oh, the possibilities!
      In some German books I've encountered sentences that wound on for more than a whole page.

    • @cgduude
      @cgduude Před rokem +20

      This is 100% how I think and I talk. I often try to tone it down especially for people who don't know me very well. But it's very rewarding when people can follow me, and I find people who communicate the same way.
      This is the first video I've seen from Sydney and it's very refreshing!

    • @julius333333
      @julius333333 Před rokem +2

      I don't find that enjoyable

  • @AutiStoner
    @AutiStoner Před rokem +485

    i heavily relate to the cluttering. as an autist i've always felt that my brain moves faster than my body does, in that i speak very quickly (cluttering), write too quickly (whoops i have dysgraphia), and walk very quickly.

    • @bethvalenzuela6689
      @bethvalenzuela6689 Před rokem +5

      Me too!!

    • @SkankHunt42isback
      @SkankHunt42isback Před rokem

      *as a defective

    • @nv3363
      @nv3363 Před rokem +22

      I clutter a lot and will stop mid sentence and my brain will go blank, i will also sometimes confuse words and say a word that sounds similar to the word I was trying to say a lot or will pronounce a word weirdly and will make it long or halfway thru the word my brain gets confused and will replace it with a sound I think it’s supposed to make ex: “im hungry is there food in the fridge?” I’ll say something like “I’m hungry- ……………. I’m “hungryyyyyy isss” there “foop” in the “ridge?” Then someone will say “huh?” I’ll repeat it again without knowing that there is anything wrong and they’ll say “huhh??” Then I’ll stop and try to reword it and then magically they know know I’m saying

    • @zrajm
      @zrajm Před rokem +5

      Is walking fast and talking fast correlated? (I certainly do both!)
      (Aslo there's a silent L i both those words, making my sentence above look all pretty.)

    • @wigwagstudios2474
      @wigwagstudios2474 Před rokem

      wtf i never realized i'm like this too. i type fast af, i write fast af, i never bother to think before speaking, what the hell (though honestly i think i got typing fast from this one server long story)

  • @JaydedWun
    @JaydedWun Před rokem +22

    I have a bad habit of doing the "explaining around" thing but with entire stories. Instead of going "start, middle, end", I'll be like "start, unrelated character background story, the weather in that place last year, the political machinations of it's leaders, end". The peices all end up tying together in a way that (I think) creates a more impactful story, but people will often tune out before I get to the end. I've learnt as a result to preface what I'm doing - "So I'm going to tell a story, but I want to give it some context first."

  • @spriddlez
    @spriddlez Před rokem +72

    My fave instance of Anomic aphasia I've seen was when my mom could not remember the name for the washroom/bathroom/rest room and also how to communicate "we need to turn around and go home". We were in the car having just left to go somewhere when my mom realized she needed to use the washroom. She was struggling with words until she said "Rewind!". My dad stopped the car and looked at her for clarification and she said "I need to go... I need to go to.. you know the uuuh... THE PEE PLACE!"

    • @lanya47
      @lanya47 Před rokem +9

      I'm so glad I'm not alone in this!

    • @darkacadpresenceinblood
      @darkacadpresenceinblood Před 3 měsíci +2

      "rewind! i need to go to the pee place!" is an iconic phrase haha

  • @sarakyoutube
    @sarakyoutube Před 11 měsíci +43

    I truly thank you for the immense dedication and understanding that it took to make this video. I myself being someone who now has a traumatic brain injury from an accident, this make so much sense that it's almost dumbfounding. I will say, at first when you mentioned Autism doesn't exist I was confused, but understanding your view and standpoint helped everything. From my own experience, I have felt so out of place because I was not born the way I currently experience things. Most of the people in my life knew my old way of communication, something that use seen as normal but is now foreign. I have no family members that understand the shift of the currently reality I am faced with. Unfortunately many won't understand your message unless they experience it first hand. I think you once again as this video, it helps in ways unimaginable to some

  • @isobelb
    @isobelb Před rokem +28

    The thing that I most notice in myself, (middle aged) and others like me is: excessive apologetic, inclusive corollaries. We have been so beaten down, rejected, and ridiculed by neurotypical society we have learnt to put in "verbal self defence" into how we communicate.

    • @Johnny_T779
      @Johnny_T779 Před 8 měsíci +4

      Beginning every sentence with the likes of " I don't mean to be rude, but...", "correct me if I'm wrong, but...".
      I stopped doing that in my 30's, and went looking for similar people instead. If something sounds offensive in my head, I just don't say it out loud because justifying myself is exhausting... Like, that young girl has beautiful teeth! I just imagined her face if I said it...

  • @trashee973
    @trashee973 Před rokem +37

    I love listening to other autistic people speak. There's something about it, I just understand what they're saying. I don't have to think, or wonder what something meant, or what they're trying to point to and the cadence is pleasing. It fits into my brain nicely. I remember being quiet and reserved when I was younger until one day I met a certain person that just made sense to me. We talked for hours one night, seven hours and it was wonderful. I realized then that I'm not stupid or bad at communicating, I just communicate in a different way and there's others like me out there. Every now and then I'll meet somebody like that and I always love being around them.

  • @nonpareilstoryteller5920
    @nonpareilstoryteller5920 Před rokem +38

    Just came upon your talk. My oldest child is Autistic. When he was small he constructed whole words using combinations of words that ended up being way more expressive and fun than the appropriate word e.g. spectacliars for spectacles. I, as a parent, tended to give long, many layered and complex answers to the myriad of questions my children plastered all over my life with them. Later I discovered that it was an aid to them to grasp language and develop a rich life in language and communication themselves. By the time they reached middle teens, they were verbally flying and somersaulting around each other and also by then when I launched into my usual long and complex layering of understandings, observations and meanings as answers to their questions, they would stop me with, “thats ok Mam, I get the picture”😂. And before long after that, we were having conversations rather than question and answer sessions. If in the street I saw or heard a small child ask a mother a question and the retort was “shut up” a frequent occurrence, it made me feel very sad for the child. I had by then read that long complex answers to a child, neurodiverse or normie is one of the valuable ways in which as parents we assist our children in the acquisition of language. And although my son could not read at twelve, after six weeks of one to one multi sensory teaching with a specialist teacher his reading rocketed, because he had the language skills already. Today he’s unbeatable when it comes to politics, history, current affairs and has a memory that can’t be bested. His speech flows and people cannot tell that he is autistic yet his idiosyncrasies are all his own, just like the rest of us. So thank you for this, it was illuminating and fun. 😊

  • @susansaunders249
    @susansaunders249 Před rokem +210

    I'm an autistic woman in my 50's and linguistics has been one of my lifelong "special interests", so I was thrilled to find your video. I recently asked my husband for some "raw toast". I remember having a meltdown as a child and screaming at my mom about a pin cushion but it came out as "pishion cun". Liked & subbed!

    • @ItsJustAdrean
      @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem +22

      I am silently screaming at this. I have called an elevator the Bing bong machine. A vending machine the poke clickclaclunk, my music thumpabump, and waiting for my coffee to cool "need un-hot bean water"

    • @Anaea
      @Anaea Před rokem +11

      @@ItsJustAdrean NEED UN-HOT BEAN WATER

    • @SuperKeithers
      @SuperKeithers Před rokem +8

      is raw toast just bread?

    • @jgr_lilli_
      @jgr_lilli_ Před rokem +7

      ​@@SuperKeithers In Germany (for example) toast-bread is a specific type of bread, since our commonly used bread is not suited for the toaster (because of seeds on it and/or size of the loaf).

    • @neandrewthal
      @neandrewthal Před rokem +4

      Did he give you a normal untoasted piece of bread and is that what you wanted? It would be pretty awesome if that's how you successfully communicate :D

  • @mikeflynn6816
    @mikeflynn6816 Před rokem +34

    As somebody who has absolutely no significant mathematical capacity but is still autisitic, i loved the idea that metaphor has its origins in some kind of autisitic aphasia. Being really good at understanding metaphors was the primary reason why i thought i wasn't autisitic and it was incredibly validating to encounter a "shout out" of sorts to anyone who has maybe had a similar experiece. A lot of my masking was wrapped up in understanding rhetorical subtext very well and i would hope i can say I'm not alone in this.

  • @abigailbrookes7721
    @abigailbrookes7721 Před rokem +59

    The whole answering someone’s question wrong is SOOO relatable! I thought my whole life it was just me and I was a freak for doing this.

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 Před rokem +6

      I've only started trying to figure out what's up with me over the past few years but the more I dip into communities of people with ADHD and/or autism, the more I have that exact experience you're describing of going, "Oh! I thought that was just me being a weirdo!"

    • @TheSeptet
      @TheSeptet Před 8 měsíci +3

      My parents thought I was a pathological liar for years because they would shout questions at me and I would give them the answer they wanted just to stop the shouting.

    • @Johnny_T779
      @Johnny_T779 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Yes! Like once, my father asked me to take a look at the roast chicken he prepared in the oven, asking from the living room :"so, how's the bird?" , and I replied "it's dead" 😂.

  • @vforvalorant1019
    @vforvalorant1019 Před rokem +33

    .....you talk *exactly* like I do. I. I've never met anyone that does that. The way you construct sentences, the intonation, the analogies, the word choice, the phrasing.....it was so comforting but a little unsettling because I'm so deeoly not used to hearing someone basically complete my mental sentence word for word

    • @Wrapscallionn
      @Wrapscallionn Před rokem

      My son does this....except faster.

    • @rafferon3439
      @rafferon3439 Před rokem

      Ah man, you need to hang out with people with ADHD. Myself and pretty much everyone in my life talks like this, it just sounds so normal and unremarkable to me

    • @vforvalorant1019
      @vforvalorant1019 Před rokem +4

      @@rafferon3439 Yeah I'm AuDHD but most of my friends are one or the other and none of them speak quite like this so it was super nice to hear!

    • @AmandaSbarros
      @AmandaSbarros Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@vforvalorant1019same

  • @gideonwilliams6307
    @gideonwilliams6307 Před rokem +22

    Never been diagnosed, but the fact that lying by accident with no control and the lack of social skills to correct it is a thing just gave me a huge sigh of relief. I thought it was just me.

  • @anikaistok
    @anikaistok Před rokem +178

    sydney i love the curly pigtails

  • @wdlovesthee736
    @wdlovesthee736 Před rokem +63

    "don't panic, nothing is real" !! i am still laughing at this. i actually remind myself of this every day when my anxiety brain is out on a run around the world & back. also when people get really intense about gender, its just a lot. i like the prosidic section - i didn't know this word. i'm going to look further into that. i think where my peaks come out is different each time i speak & it's not usually where i want them. my brain goes fast too. i did enjoy this video & learning the technical terms. thanks so much, again so well done. thanks for being

  • @InvertedInsideout
    @InvertedInsideout Před rokem +182

    My mind is a little blown right now. I never recognized this stuff as being related to autism, I actually find a number of these speech errors familiar, engaging, and easy to understand. Never been diagnosed, don't care about diagnosis, but I'm reflecting now about people I've known and myself differently, so thank you

    • @alisonmercer5946
      @alisonmercer5946 Před rokem +1

      Me too. Exactly what I'm like

    • @alisonmercer5946
      @alisonmercer5946 Před rokem +4

      And there were times when I literally couldn't speak when I was younger I though it was shyness maybe it is but I just could not speak

    • @InvertedInsideout
      @InvertedInsideout Před rokem +12

      ​@@alisonmercer5946 relating to people who speak in these ways always seemed natural and engaging to me, I've taken inspiration from these experiences and am able to speak more loosely and practically now because of it. I relate to words in a less direct way then most people, have a huge vocabulary and used to be overly concerned with choosing the most exact words for things, but have learned to cast thoughts more artfully.
      When I think I don't think in sentences, but rather in a way I would describe as either meta or sublinguistic, maybe both. So when I produce language whether in speech or writing its sort of like an active effort of translating my thoughts into words instead of just speaking them.

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Před rokem

      Do not self diagnose...I'm tired of kids like you grabbing onto one or two symptoms even if they're not even related or mean anything and then classify yourself as having X or Y mental illness. Most people who do this don't actually have mental illness, but more likely have internet addiction that causes inattentiveness and other symptoms that easily go away by reducing screen time. But unfortunately, you kids are so glued to your phone that you can't solve this simple fix

    • @alisonmercer5946
      @alisonmercer5946 Před rokem +1

      @@InvertedInsideout there is a voice in my head but it goes too fast. Wish it would slow down at least lol

  • @mmegraham
    @mmegraham Před rokem +112

    Yay!! I've been embracing my own wackiness as an autistic person in the last year or so. My speech patterns and directness in subject matter are turned up to ELEVEN most of the time! When you were talking about Doug the dog from the movie UP, I laughed, because I absolutely love talking like Doug! Simple, honest, exuberant, and direct. "I am your DOG and I LOVE you!" Fortunately, people in my life mostly get it.

  • @ItsJustAdrean
    @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem +108

    Do you ever catch yourself thinking 5 things at once and all of them sound better in your head than the often hilarious things that concurrently jumble their way out of your mouth 😂

    • @a_wild_Kirillian
      @a_wild_Kirillian Před rokem +4

      Yes. And I can't count how many times I merge two words together to get one half of each said.

    • @ItsJustAdrean
      @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem

      @@a_wild_Kirillian At least 3x a day for me tbh

    • @DinosaurNick
      @DinosaurNick Před rokem +2

      Yes! Me! I tried to say "I bet" and "I'm guessing" at the same time and I said, "I'm buessing...."

    • @christianyaerger1751
      @christianyaerger1751 Před rokem +1

      @@DinosaurNick It's ridiculous how often I combine words just like this. XD

    • @DinosaurNick
      @DinosaurNick Před rokem

      @@christianyaerger1751 ikr same!

  • @gracemiller3861
    @gracemiller3861 Před rokem +26

    I have always spoken super fast. My teacher took off points because she said that I talked too fast and my speech pathologist was explaining to me that you wouldn't speak super fast when you're explaining something to someone. I was like what? That's just how i normally talk. I think that it shouldn't be allowed to take points off for those reasons because I can't really help it.

  • @niamh8967
    @niamh8967 Před rokem +47

    I’m so pleased that CZcams recommended this video to me! Partly because I’m a psychologist and neurodiversity is one of my special interests, but also because your communication style really suits my ADHD brain - you speak at a pleasantly quick pace, and include lots of extra clauses/comments dotted throughout which adds an element of spontaneity and maintains interest.
    I find it fascinating how neurodivergent people - particularly children, and including undiagnosed folk - are often drawn to each other, and I imagine this difference of communication style (and then, it follows, preference of received style) may play a part in this.

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Před rokem +1

      Being a psychology student in university doesn't mean you're a psychologist. 😂 Nothing of what you said is coherent or structured enough to bely anything else...nice try though!

    • @toatrika2443
      @toatrika2443 Před rokem +5

      ​@@tevarinvagabond1192that sounds like a skill issue on your end

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Před rokem

      @@toatrika2443 Yeah, your reading comprehension skills need some work kiddo

    • @toatrika2443
      @toatrika2443 Před rokem +7

      @@tevarinvagabond1192 im able to understand the original comment perfectly well while you complained about being unable to do so.
      You might wanna give being less unjustifiedly full of yourself a try.

    • @tevarinvagabond1192
      @tevarinvagabond1192 Před rokem

      @@toatrika2443 Please read my comment again, because nothing about it said that I didn't understand...rather, that the OP's usage of speech implies that she/he is lying. Again...please improve your reading skills, because they're atrocious (if you're a child I'll give you some slack, perhaps you haven't graduated yet and/or haven't had a full education)

  • @ptcoristine5093
    @ptcoristine5093 Před rokem +90

    My friend called her toes “foot fingers “ and I love 💕 her even more now!

    • @pilouuuu
      @pilouuuu Před rokem +23

      Funnily enough in Spanish we have only the word "dedos" for both toes and fingers so we actually refer to toes as "dedos del pie" which means "foot fingers."

    • @drewzero1
      @drewzero1 Před rokem +15

      I always loved how in German gloves are called "hand shoes".

    • @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa
      @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa Před rokem +8

      ​@@drewzero1 no wonder I loved studying German as a kid, it tickled my autistic brain in a way I totally got!

    • @ItsJustAdrean
      @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem +4

      It is the same word in Russian and Spanish, so I understand perfectly

    • @joanathoma2324
      @joanathoma2324 Před rokem +4

      Foot fingers are also used in greek😊

  • @KissyfaceJenkins
    @KissyfaceJenkins Před rokem +90

    I've been told that I sound like a text to speech program when I talk, whenever someone says that, it really bothers me. I've also been asked if I use recreational drugs. I tried over the years to develop a normal speaking style, and I ended up with something that sounds almost like I'm perpetually reading someone a bedtime story.

    • @heedmydemands
      @heedmydemands Před rokem +10

      I'm pretty sure I often sound like a robot

    • @MarlopolyGaming
      @MarlopolyGaming Před rokem +10

      I was once told in high school that I sounded like one of those tannoid voices you hear telling you which train is going from which platform at a station. The whole class was like "oh yeah!!"
      That was 11 years ago and I still feel off about it haha

    • @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa
      @duetopersonalreasonsaaaaaa Před rokem +12

      Yes, I understand, I have a bad habit of either sounding like I'm their therapist or like I'm in a movie acting (or I'm just repeating the way someone in a video/movie said something). No wonder all this masking causes social exhaustion so quickly!

    • @ItsJustAdrean
      @ItsJustAdrean Před rokem +4

      Sounds relaxing ❤

    • @BlueinRhapsody
      @BlueinRhapsody Před rokem +7

      I have been told I speak like a book. I've also had a lot of people ask where I am from to find out my accent. 😅

  • @jennifermems1111
    @jennifermems1111 Před rokem +52

    One of the things your video makes me think of is the dearth of literature involving autism in adulthood and how autistics process various human interactions as children versus as adults. Specifically, it makes me think that it looks like you are making this your career so that when Gen A scholars, educators, and infotainers explain these things they will be referencing your books among their other sources. Thank you for doing this. It makes me happy.

  • @robins7730
    @robins7730 Před rokem +19

    Learning about gestalt language processing is interesting because I've noticed the process very clearly while learning new languages. When I listen to media (mainly music) in those languages, I've always remembered things in small chunks--interesting phrases or sentences--and been able to remember those chunks & their meanings far before I can really break them down into their components. Then at some point I start to identify components common to a few of them and either look up or guess at the meaning.

  • @EllieShockley
    @EllieShockley Před rokem +250

    LOL "honk honk dog" is great, sort of like the "potato hashtags" my husband said when he forgot the term "waffle fries"

  • @eleanorwillow9671
    @eleanorwillow9671 Před rokem +21

    I do the fast-talking!
    Oh, and I often go non-verbal. Now, I grew up totally undiagnosed, so I always considered it to be shyness, not feeling like putting the energy into speaking, or valuing thought over speech.

  • @bunnii-gz6su
    @bunnii-gz6su Před rokem +91

    Gestalt is actually german and means something like the looks of somebody or something material, so this makes sense. You learn by looking at the whole thing

    • @haroldgifford852
      @haroldgifford852 Před rokem +2

      🇩🇪🇦🇹

    • @heedmydemands
      @heedmydemands Před rokem

      Thanks

    • @JamesDavis-ps6yy
      @JamesDavis-ps6yy Před rokem +1

      Yep. You end up with a general sense of things, instead of being able to justify your statements with bullet points

    • @toatrika2443
      @toatrika2443 Před rokem +1

      ​@@JamesDavis-ps6yysomehow that specific way of describing it made it make sense for me. Didnt really get the spaghetti thing, so thanks

    • @silkwesir1444
      @silkwesir1444 Před rokem +1

      I had trouble understanding this as well. Already being familiar with Gestalt psychology distracted me, because it's not the same as that at all.

  • @tazmenfisherhansen7569
    @tazmenfisherhansen7569 Před rokem +46

    So interesting. The prosody thing - I'm often asked whether English is my second language or where I'm from. When I say Indiana, they say, no where are you *originally from* and seem incredulous when I say I was born in the U.S. to parents who were also born here.

    • @oraldogoncalves8791
      @oraldogoncalves8791 Před rokem +10

      I've had a cashier ask me if I was a foreigner once in my own country, presumably because of my speech patterns. In her defence this was in a city whose most distinctive feature is a university which sees the odd international student

    • @BlueinRhapsody
      @BlueinRhapsody Před rokem +3

      I've had the same thing happen many times! My husband has told me my speech patterns are atypical and that I sound a bit like a book! 😅

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 Před rokem +3

      I just sorta lie and say that I spent a lot of time with my grandma when I was young, who was from [insert made up town name in England], and that made me talk kinda like her.
      Which isn't technically untrue, she was English, but the only things that really caused me to say that aren't common in America are how I accent the word "aluminum" and the fact that I say "innit" sometimes

    • @HobbitBroad
      @HobbitBroad Před rokem +3

      I finally started telling those who asked that I grew up watching PBS and BBC. I grew up in Texas. I can make myself sound Texan (I'm good with accents) but I just don't naturally sound like I'm from there.

  • @KitKat_293
    @KitKat_293 Před rokem +5

    oh this could explain why my language and writing abilities are quite strong, but when learning a new language (with a monolingual upbringing) was SOO difficult. genuinely an entirely different mental exercise. constructing grammar and sentence structure for a new-to-you language based on various independent rules is much more analytical.
    the shout out to anne of green gables style writing & speaking made me scream. i was truly so ~found by those books lmao

  • @mmartens3
    @mmartens3 Před rokem +62

    My daughter speaks so fast she creates new contractions.

    • @Wrapscallionn
      @Wrapscallionn Před rokem +8

      My daughter creates whole new words : her computer was acting up once, so she slammed the lid and called it a " nincomputer".

    • @mmartens3
      @mmartens3 Před rokem +2

      @@Wrapscallionn that’s pretty clever!!

    • @OhSoUnicornly
      @OhSoUnicornly Před rokem +7

      This type of situation got awkward for me when I was speaking to a colleague and tried to end a sentence with "yeah so that's it, basically" but I contracted the word "basically" (with a bit of "probably" mixed in) and it sounded like "baby". So I just said "yeah so that's it, baby" to my coworker.

    • @mmartens3
      @mmartens3 Před rokem +1

      @@OhSoUnicornly oooh… yeah that would be awkward!

    • @mmartens3
      @mmartens3 Před rokem

      @@OhSoUnicornly my daughter says things that aren’t generally recognizable unless you have heard her say it before. She has a few regular phrases. If she wants more sausage for breakfast she says, “unt sausagain” for “I want sausage again” and if she doesn’t want to use the public toilets (usually because they have automatic flush) She says “po-home” for “potty at home” meaning “I want to go potty at home instead” (and she says these very quickly).

  • @ryn2844
    @ryn2844 Před rokem +35

    Unreliable speech. Lol I just thought that was me panic masking because I wasn't fast enough to construct the actual thing I wanted to say and just went with whatever popped in my head first to avoid the awkward.

    • @ryn2844
      @ryn2844 Před rokem

      @joiceomo2829 You've replied to one of my comments before, with the exact same paragraph. Spammer.

  • @empiricaltheory6650
    @empiricaltheory6650 Před rokem +13

    "Do not panic, nothing is real..."
    The most scary and comforting phrase I've heard today. 😂 Gonna use this for my anxiety.

  • @nitt3rz
    @nitt3rz Před rokem +81

    Hearing the phrase " You perceive the whole rather than the sum of its parts" kind of hit me hard. Whenever i have subtitles/CC on (or read a book); I read the words as soon as I see them. Which I was surprised to hear is not how most people read. Edit: I am self-diagnosed ASC & ADH & in my late 30s.

    • @mid70smod17
      @mid70smod17 Před rokem +7

      How do most people read them?

    • @nitt3rz
      @nitt3rz Před rokem +20

      @@mid70smod17 One word at a time. I meant to say I read a whole block of text at once.

    • @brandonwilson4408
      @brandonwilson4408 Před rokem +1

      were you good at reading tests as kid too?

    • @nitt3rz
      @nitt3rz Před rokem +13

      @@brandonwilson4408 I was, from the age of about 8, I maxed out the reading age test, with a reading age of 14.

    • @theodiscusgaming3909
      @theodiscusgaming3909 Před rokem +11

      @@nitt3rz do most people really read one word at a time?? that seems too slow

  • @thesteeles
    @thesteeles Před rokem +4

    I clicked on this video, and my attention span has not once left. I actually enjoyed your speaking pace, and find that most CZcamsrs and people tend to speak too slow for me.

    • @the-fiddling-fox
      @the-fiddling-fox Před 2 měsíci

      I’m the opposite. I’ve slowed her down to 0.75x - she’s way too fast for me. 😂 There’s another autism CZcamsr who is the same.

  • @Yunamyhero
    @Yunamyhero Před rokem +10

    You're passion for this subject really shines through in this video! Thank for the insight! This info is invaluable for us teachers who need to communicate with all students, not just student considered "neurotypical"

  • @hannahk.summerville5908
    @hannahk.summerville5908 Před rokem +8

    You don't even have to start talking about the patterns for me to realize that we talk so much alike. The pace, the corners you round etc. I never understand why my partner sometimes has problems following me in a conversation and then I get this mirror and am like oh yeah haha. Eventhough I don't have that problem with you it is pretty stimulating^^

    • @johnplaysgames3120
      @johnplaysgames3120 Před rokem +4

      Yeah, I kept waiting for the part of the video where her speech patterns were going to be "odd" in some way because she kept mentioning herself as an example and, instead, I was confused because it all just sounded like natural and normal conversation to me. I came into the video wondering if I would recognize any of her speech patterns in myself (as I've been on a journey for the past couple of years to figure out why my executive functioning is so wack) but, though I didn't realize it at first, I guess my confusion at not finding anything out of the ordinary in the way she spoke was kind of an answer to my question.

  • @BenFoldsFan421
    @BenFoldsFan421 Před rokem

    Thank you for the audio description! It is very appreciated

  • @qracle
    @qracle Před rokem +5

    Fascinating video. Applause to the algorithm for recommending it to me.
    This is a fantastic info-dump, and helps me recognize and name the patterns of speech that myself and my neurodiverse family display.
    Looking forward to checking out your music.

  • @Crobisaur
    @Crobisaur Před rokem +3

    This is a great video especially learning about gestalt language processing! And gives me a lot more confidence in how I process my thoughts and language.

  • @ericacosat9557
    @ericacosat9557 Před rokem +1

    Your comment about the metaphors legitimately and literally made my day. I love it. Also, I get great humor out of the fact I noted how I didn’t need to speed your video, as I do with many others. Thank you so very much- new sub!

  • @ryanh8945
    @ryanh8945 Před rokem +2

    This video shed so much light on so many things for me. From beginning to end, I know myself better now because of it. Thank you 🙂

  • @buttercxpdraws8101
    @buttercxpdraws8101 Před rokem +3

    I found this info to be incredibly enlightening and useful. Love your work Sydney ✌️💕👏

  • @EmilySmirleGURPS
    @EmilySmirleGURPS Před rokem +5

    I got called by a scammer trying to convince me they were from Microsoft and my computer had a critical virus and I was so irritated all I could do was sort of... screech.
    Normally I'd feel a little bad at screeching at someone out of the blue, but not this time!
    On work conference calls I do periodically have to stop mid-sentence because I'm getting verbally jumbled (cluttering, stuttering, dysnomia, anomia, prosidy problems, just a bucket of quirks), and just start it again from scratch.

  • @yameyumex
    @yameyumex Před rokem +1

    Just 30 seconds in and I noticed how helpful and calming it was for me to process the video because you described what I can see. I didn't expect to make a difference for me, I just learned something about myself. Thank you.

  • @thirstyfish7882
    @thirstyfish7882 Před rokem

    I subscribed before I'd even finished the first minute. Very excited about the rest !

  • @catcent
    @catcent Před rokem +12

    I found this to be informative, thank you. One thing that wasn't mentioned are processing.pauses.

  • @marcusaurelius49
    @marcusaurelius49 Před rokem +14

    I jusr discovered your channel, in much the same way a 15th century European explorer discovers an inhabited continent. 😁
    I really appreciated all your research and the presentation of the information. Best of all you have just improved my life immensely by reminding me of the long forgotten fact that I can watch videos at >1x speeds. I often get bored with many videos as my brain wants things to come in quicker. Now I am sorted, and you have a new subscriber. 😁😁

    • @matthollywood8060
      @matthollywood8060 Před rokem +2

      I have the same problem when I click on a link for what looks like an interesting article, but instead it's a video and they're talking so slow that I could easily have read the entire script before they finish the first sentence.

    • @Naomi.Hofman
      @Naomi.Hofman Před rokem +2

      I love this feature and use it all the time (1.5x) - a quicker way to gather the data in video without getting bored, plus saves time. You can also adjust speeds on audio books or textbooks with audio features! Plus, probably easier processing the information for my ADD brain!

  • @crowkraehenfrau2604
    @crowkraehenfrau2604 Před 11 měsíci

    My goodness...just found your channel...and instantly LOVE it!

  • @hunteratops
    @hunteratops Před rokem +2

    Great, informative video! As someone who also watches most videos on 1.5 speed...I can't say I'll need to do that for this one or any others of yours. You are super easy to understand and follow!

  • @Jake320
    @Jake320 Před rokem +3

    thanks so much for this video. I'm constantly still learning about my own autism and this video really helped me to understand myself better. To understand why i say things in a certain way or why I'm not able to express myself "normally" in other ways. I genuinely feel better about myself as a person after watching this.

  • @kuura37
    @kuura37 Před rokem +3

    the "feeling like your brain is constipated" thing is constant for me and it's so annoying!! there are so many thoughts in my head but I just can't verbalize them, I don't know the right words, and if I try to explain, the person listening would just misunderstand. I also can't speak when I'm too overwhelmed or in a sensory overload, it's too exhausting

  • @h2hoe625
    @h2hoe625 Před rokem +1

    i really like the audiodescription section at the beginning of this video. thanks for making the internet a more inclusive place :)

  • @argylesoze4945
    @argylesoze4945 Před rokem

    The opening descriptor of the video was pretty neat. I mostly just listen to videos and this was a wild one for me. Thank you.

  • @bigtimbolim
    @bigtimbolim Před rokem +10

    Very interesting video. Lots of people say I'm aloof and nervous all the time. Nope, I'm just artistic!

  • @needsmoretacos4807
    @needsmoretacos4807 Před rokem +2

    Omg not only do your descriptions and explanations here completely outline me, but you actually speak exactly like me

  • @FiChr
    @FiChr Před 9 měsíci

    Yes, this does help my understanding immensely. Thank you 😊

  • @helge2888
    @helge2888 Před rokem +1

    You are my new favorite person on the internet

  • @crazygeorgelincoln
    @crazygeorgelincoln Před rokem +4

    Christ that was intense . Well done.
    I find turning an idea into a liniar linguistic stream such an effort,
    I need a buffering tattoo on my face. So people dont presume I'm finished.
    Im just editing chunks of sentences to fit together , concisely and efficiently , removing erm just chunks,and trying to hold down the original idea in ram .

    • @robscovell5951
      @robscovell5951 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Man that's so annoying .... I haven't finished constructing what I'm trying to say but they take the first part and run with it and the conversation has gone way off course before I can start to explain the rest of my thinking. At that point I just give up and go along with it because it's too much effort because people don't seem to like to circle back in conversations. Another reason to avoid trying to have conversations with allists.

  • @jonathandill3557
    @jonathandill3557 Před rokem +12

    The "you" thing explains a lot that is referring to myself as "you" when speaking. Some mindfulness groups really emphasize "speak from your own experience" and I've found myself reminded of that because I kept saying "you" when I really meant I/me. I've worked really hard to get out of that habit.

    • @tigristhelynx7224
      @tigristhelynx7224 Před rokem +7

      Wow, you've made me realize that I also do this. It often happens anytime I'm trying to explain the sequence of actions within a narrative, an example being "you'd get drunk, immediately regret it, you'd feel horrible and then you'd pass out." which sounds like I'm talking about YOU but in reality I'm talking about myself. I've done this for years. Which means I do this verbally as well, which is harder to catch myself doing. Ugh.

    • @jonathandill3557
      @jonathandill3557 Před rokem +5

      ​@@tigristhelynx7224Around middle school a friend of mine made fun of Ozzy Osbourne referring to himself in third person on a talk show like "Ozzy likes..." and I felt weirdly hurt by that and didn't understand why as I wasn't a fan. I suppose I was self conscious that I recognized that I had an atypical speech style myself.

    • @amethystrocks6433
      @amethystrocks6433 Před rokem +6

      ​@@tigristhelynx7224 A *lot* of people do this. Often people start talking (or writing) using "I" and switch to "you" partway through. I always marvel at how pervasive this seems to be. 😊

    • @danieldaniels7571
      @danieldaniels7571 Před rokem +1

      ​@@tigristhelynx7224 I struggle with this too

    • @magicalgirl4
      @magicalgirl4 Před rokem

      I do this A LOT as well

  • @MrShavrgo
    @MrShavrgo Před rokem

    I get stuck on sounds as well but I found it really helped with music with sampling or hearing lil music details. amazing content frfr

  • @Yoyo235th
    @Yoyo235th Před 11 měsíci

    This was one of the coolest and more informative (why isn't it informativiest) videos I've seen in a while, with so many fascinating nuggets of info thrown in. Many thanks for making it!

    • @themanhimself1949
      @themanhimself1949 Před měsícem

      if that question is genuine & not rhetorical:
      i was taught its because of the syllables and the word being too long
      so its cool, cooler, coolest; fast, faster, fastest
      but informative, more informative, the most informative, exciting, more exciting, the most exciting.
      i think its 3 or 3+ syllables? usually i do a mental check of it sounding good or if i heard it before, rather than actually questioning the grammar.
      it makes sense visually to not clutter too many letters into one word, but it doesnt really change too much verbally imo

  • @taramoonshadow7260
    @taramoonshadow7260 Před rokem +3

    Very Fresh and New!
    Love it!

  • @argentpuck
    @argentpuck Před rokem +4

    Just stumbled on this video and based on how fluent you seemed to me, as in, very recognizably similar to my own patterns, I think I've just learned something about how I speak that I'd never even begun to realize.

  • @seagurll
    @seagurll Před rokem +1

    This helped me finally make sense of so many things I do, thank you! 💕

  • @amethystrocks6433
    @amethystrocks6433 Před rokem +2

    Wow! So glad I found this video! I'm a psychologist & also interested in linguistics & language, so I felt an immediate kinship. 😊
    You're so enthusiastic and upbeat, it's a pleasure watching the video. I love that you explain things so well and even include info about sources and references.
    I'm learning so much!
    Thank you!

  • @ncpolley
    @ncpolley Před rokem +3

    I like the way you talk. I get it.
    I was genuinely confused when you said its an autistic speech pattern.
    The interjections and idea mixing is very comfy.

  • @TheArtFlower
    @TheArtFlower Před rokem +7

    How is it possible that I've had my diagnosis for over 10 years, and this is the first time I've heard that accdentall lying and made up words are just natural for someone like me 🤣
    Really great video ✨️

  • @magicalgirl4
    @magicalgirl4 Před rokem +1

    I've started speeding up youtube videos to 1.25 or 1.5 but the speed you're talking as it perfect for me, I realised this when you mentioned it and looked down to see if I sped it up but nope!

  • @L1Q
    @L1Q Před rokem

    I have never heard my own speech issues described with such detail, thank you soo much!

  • @Shane4643
    @Shane4643 Před rokem +3

    As a new parent of an autistic child, I enjoyed and learned ALOT from this video. You're doing a great job and helping many people. 👏 Don't stop!

  • @swagmund_freud6669
    @swagmund_freud6669 Před rokem +5

    I'm an aspie and a linguistic major, and yet I've never heard of gestallt language development, but it makes SO much sense looking back over my life and the way I think of languages. That's literally entirely how I learnt Spanish as an adult. Like it's the only method I learned and I didn't even realize it until you explained it. I learned songs and song lyrics, and especially stuff they say over and over again.

    • @lilla4521
      @lilla4521 Před rokem

      Omg I learn from songs as well! It makes so much sense now! Context of words helps so much.

  • @catamescatames
    @catamescatames Před rokem +1

    Actually love the speed at which you speak. I just finished another of your videos and if asked how long they were without looking I'd have guesstimated them both 50% shorter. Like clown cars, CZcams videos are simply more engaging the more you manage to pack into them

  • @knowhere60
    @knowhere60 Před rokem +5

    Love Donovan's reversed prosidy in songs like "Sunshine Superman", Once there is a Mountain, etc. It tickles my brain 🧠

  • @atlys258
    @atlys258 Před rokem +28

    I never knew "insufficient speech" was something that actually existed outside of my own personal experience. I've really struggled with it as far back as I can remember, getting what's inside out there in a manner that's easy to parse feels anywhere from difficult to impossible because my thoughts are all so interconnected and occur all at once and I feel like I have to lay a foundation and carefully construct the pathway for the recipient to hopefully understand, even when it comes to writing/texting, sometimes especially when it comes to writing/texting (yes, even now), to the point where I will shutdown outside even though everything's going full-bore inside, its among the most frustrating things I deal with and it's f*cking exhausting.

  • @spotlight5900
    @spotlight5900 Před 5 měsíci

    Really happy I stumbled upon your channel. A lot of the discussion/commentary about Autism (and mental health in general) online seems to lack any actual substance. I really appreciate that you defined the terms you were explaining in plain language, didn't use buzzwords, etc. Thank you!

  • @cultureweeb4831
    @cultureweeb4831 Před rokem +1

    I think you just helped me realize what I meant when I was telling people I was learning stuff by understanding the "logic" and "reasons" behind it, and that I didn't need a dictionary for french lessons because I understood the rules of what letters made sense depending on their sounds (i'm from quebec, and remembered talking about this in high school). I've been thinking of being on the autism spectrum for a while with how I need to write down manually everything in a notebook whether it's creative or professionnal), but adding all of this just blown my mind.
    Thank you for this. I understand why I was writing the way I did. That is... huge!

  • @theia5767
    @theia5767 Před rokem +5

    First video here! I'm sure I'll watch more. I loved the information and your delivery. Your last name is really cool too; I've never seen that before.
    Oh and my favorite dance-around-the-misplaced-word phrase I've done lately is "the metal fire bread box". I've had geese and "honk honk dog" is a 10/10, perfect substitute.

  • @nanimalgirlEssie
    @nanimalgirlEssie Před rokem +5

    At the risk of having you base a slight part of your self-worth on my comment, which, obviously, no one should ever do: YOU'RE SO AWESOME! I loved this video and ten minutes in I already learned more about autistic speech patterns than I had until now. I loved it! Thank you for putting your work out there and sharing your research (of research, lol) with others. Very helpful! P.s. love the 'autism just a label' thing. I see it that way too: neurodivergence is a minority as compared to neurotypical which has resulted in less understanding, accomodation and celebration of what it has to offer, when really, it offers the world so much! There's no better (of course there is: neurodivergent); there's only different. We should value both and help each other where differences cause miscommunications or issues.

  • @excrubulent
    @excrubulent Před rokem

    All the examples started as really relatable for me and only got moreso as the video went on. Also, the cluttering thing you're doing I wouldn't have understood as an "impediment", but before you mentioned it I was trying to think of how to describe what it is about your speech patterns that I like so much. Like it just makes sense to my brain and I enjoy the little surprises when the sentence pauses and then unexpectedly continues. It is just whimsical and fun! As someone who does this myself, I feel like the emotional tonality of it comes through really clearly.

  • @nataliedokter8159
    @nataliedokter8159 Před rokem +2

    This is the first video of yours that I've watched and I really enjoyed it! Your sense of humor is great, and the content was interesting! You have a new subscriber!

  • @Jrpyify
    @Jrpyify Před rokem +8

    Got a couple for ya.
    I keep forgetting what air fryers are called, so been referring to it as the hotbox.
    My son (also autistic) called the ceiling fan a whirly-phoom once, and we all kind of decided that's what they are now.

  • @billmaghan
    @billmaghan Před rokem +3

    Thank you for captioning.🤟

  • @diosysinfinite9489
    @diosysinfinite9489 Před rokem

    wow! Great knowledge and an unique perspective on life in general!

  • @corvus_da
    @corvus_da Před rokem +2

    When you got to cluttering I immediately went "yes - yes - YES!" because that's a perfect description of what I do all the time! Also I didn't notice anything unusual in the way you talk (not even the speed until you mentioned it), so I guess that's because I talk the same way lol

  • @gabi.1524
    @gabi.1524 Před rokem +33

    Hi. Can autistic people speak childlike? I'm autistic and my mom says that I need to speak more adultlike because of my age, she thinks I sound childish

    • @rahbeeuh
      @rahbeeuh Před rokem +20

      Same here. I've had a childlike voice my whole life and some people are "shocked" that I still sound so childlike. Anyway from what I've seen the answer to your question is yes

    • @weallhaveastorytotell
      @weallhaveastorytotell Před rokem +3

      This. Relatable!

    • @ilariaerina1231
      @ilariaerina1231 Před rokem +1

      Oh yes! I wondered about it if it's also a trait

    • @SmallSpoonBrigade
      @SmallSpoonBrigade Před rokem +6

      It's possible, the question is to what extent you want to deal with the consequences of that versus the consequences of masking. I wish there were a good answer, but over the long term, the more people that just speak like themselves with the main focus being communication, the sooner this kind of silly advice won't be given.

    • @dickottel
      @dickottel Před rokem +3

      I say silly stuff and words that don't make sense and sing to myself in a childlike way and meow meow a lot 😂

  • @FebruaryWashington
    @FebruaryWashington Před rokem +4

    As someone that has thereotically perfect 20 20 vision but fail to identify objects practically in front of them unless given a colour to go with, I really appreciate you describing yourself and the room you are in ❤

  • @speculativism
    @speculativism Před rokem +1

    Thanks for making this video. I enjoyed it very much and it made good sense. When I was younger I often had strange episodes where part of my brain seemed to be going unusually fast while a different part was going slow. I had a weird subjective feeling of thoughts going fast and slow at the same time. Also gaps which may have been micro seizures. Stuttering in early childhood was fixed by speech therapist telling me to take a breath, slow down and speak slowly and carefully with pauses (but then speaking slowly with pauses became my new unusual way of speaking upon which people would comment). I seldom have had the inability to speak but I experience it more as just needing more time to think about a question before I can answer it and people get frustrated and walk away because they think I'm not going to answer. Also physical dyspraxia. I see characters in movies throw a bunch of keys to another person who very easily catches them and I think "That's not possible!". I sometimes get the accidental substitution of words which don't make any sense or just "glurb" noises. Also physical hand cramps when writing with a pen. Visual migraines (sometimes called "auras"). And sometimes losing my balance when walking along the road, just as if I was drunk but I'm completely sober. Difficulty in explaining things to people because of my tendency to break a topic down into logical pieces which can then be assembled to show how a thing works. People often don't like that because they don't understand what I'm doing and they can't follow my train of thought and examples of basic principles. I don't particularly have the "either analytical or gestalt" thing because I do both.

  • @ashmac87
    @ashmac87 Před rokem

    You are awesome! I appreciated the info in your video and enjoyed your personality. 😊❤

  • @hildcit
    @hildcit Před rokem +9

    I don't know that much about this, but i've heard mentions before of how autistic people might have an actual different accent than what they're expected to have. i did not grow up speaking with the same accent as the people around me (Norwegian, so country full of different accents) I spoke somewhat more like what would be on tv, than my parents, friends, school etc. i've even gotten questions of when i moved here, despite living basically at the same place my whole life. i just find this kind of interesting.

    • @magicalgirl4
      @magicalgirl4 Před rokem +1

      I'm Australian and I've been asked before if I'm American or grew up there, just because I adopted some inflections from watching cartoons a lot. My best friend is the same but it his accent is way more obvious

  • @cash-skywalker4213
    @cash-skywalker4213 Před rokem +20

    I definitely do the phonemic paraphasia thing. One example I started a few months ago is singing the hippopotamus for Christmas song as “I want a pippohotamus for Christmas.”

    • @knowhere60
      @knowhere60 Před rokem +2

      Sounds right to me...😊

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 Před rokem +1

      This is actually a common thing for NTs to mess up sometimes too, it's called metathesis. For example people who say "ask" as "ax".

    • @cash-skywalker4213
      @cash-skywalker4213 Před rokem

      @@swagmund_freud6669 no I did it because it felt right I definitely didn’t do it not as a mess up

    • @swagmund_freud6669
      @swagmund_freud6669 Před rokem

      @@cash-skywalker4213 And saying "ax" feels right to people who say "ax".

    • @cash-skywalker4213
      @cash-skywalker4213 Před rokem

      @@swagmund_freud6669 That's a black culture thing. But this is an autistic thing. Do you not understand that she describes what I was talking about as an autistic idiosyncratic speech pattern in the video. I'm autistic so what is your point?

  • @michaelcooke3518
    @michaelcooke3518 Před 6 měsíci +2

    I’m currently obsessed with the speech patterns of the incredible speaking parrot Gizmo the Grey
    The way she strings words into sentences is to me quite remarkable coz it’s very similar to the random sentences I hear coming from water or wind or traffic noises or tea kettles you name it sort of like the incredibly complex information coming in schizophrenic speak
    I’ve got a list of things she says that repeat in my head and I just have to say out loud giving me endless joy atm

  • @robertmitchell1920
    @robertmitchell1920 Před 11 měsíci

    Thank you for the explanation. I run into many similar speech glitches due to having DCD, however I'm definitely analytical rather than gestalt, and employ intonation to convey intention, which is something that really comes across as different with ASD and really explains the communication difference.

  • @prschuster
    @prschuster Před rokem +3

    My teacher once remarked, "I wish you could talk as fast as you think". My mouth lags behind my brain. What does that mean?

  • @dickottel
    @dickottel Před rokem +4

    I'm watching it at 1.5 speed lol. My brain wants more information in the limited time I have. There's so much I want to watch 😹

  • @chrisagler8472
    @chrisagler8472 Před rokem

    You are awesome. thanks for teaching me about my automute and so many other things. Your baud rate of speech is perfect as I have to focus to keep up and the fat between my ears does not look for shinies. You have marvelous hair but the pigtails do make you look a bit like a kiddo. I subscribed and saved this video because I need to watch it a few times to fully absorb all the amazing things. Thank you again. especially for doing the voice when speaking of the cows in the field and the village.

  • @JenSumma
    @JenSumma Před 10 měsíci

    I love your hair!! It’s classy and fun! I love the way it curls especially in the front (because it’s exaggerated) 🙃