Image of a screenshot of Twitter of a screenshot of Facebook.

The Facebook screenshot reads:

Fun fact about me: When I’m having a conversation with you, I will periodically bring up personal experiences from my own life, interspersed withing your own stories that you’re telling me. I’m not doing this to try and make the conversation about me, or to take away from your own experience. Actually, what I’m attempting to do, is to try and show you that I do, in fact, understand what you’re trying to tell me, and that I am giving your story my full attention.

It can really be off-putting to some people, so if I’ve ever done this to you during a conversation, I just wanted to make sure you know that I wasn’t trying to take over your story, I was just doing my best to connect with you in the moment.

The screenshot of Twitter reads:

This. I am fully aware that I do this. And I feel so guilty every time, but this. Understand this.

  • Kraivo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Why so many times i read adhd and now autism memes i can relate to them.

    • BOMBS@lemmy.worldOPM
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      1 year ago

      A lot of them are typical experiences that are just much more intense or frequent among ASD/ADHD. So while everyone pees, if you’re peeing 100 times per day, then it becomes indicative of a larger issue.

    • dsemy@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Idk about other instances, but almost anyone I had a long conversation with seems to do this…

      • noride@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Because it’s completely normal to share personal experiences during conversations with people you are familiar with. In fact, in my opinion, the weird part would be calling someone out for bringing up a conversationally relevant anecdote.

        • octoperson
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          1 year ago

          Could be that it’s appropriate or inappropriate depending on context, or how you do it, and auti folk are less intrinsically able to read the room. So the autistic trait here would not be doing it, but getting called out about it or fretting about it. NTs wouldn’t really give it a second thought.

        • BOMBS@lemmy.worldOPM
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          1 year ago

          the weird part would be calling someone out for bringing up a conversationally relevant anecdote.

          I think where the autism comes in is that many times we’ll 2nd guess ourselves when this happens and take on the blame, when really, the other person is instigating the problem by being insulted, then blaming the person trying to relate.

      • Nepenthe@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Gonna say it’s because conversations are supposed to be an equal back-and-forth and the internet makes me sad?