Oh, smacked in the noggin with a 2x4 wrapped in velvet. Yeah, that's what it felt like.

Lorne ,'Smile Time'


Spike's Bitches 45: That sure as hell wasn't in the brochure.  

[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.


erikaj - Nov 21, 2009 11:42:40 am PST #1251 of 30000
Always Anti-fascist!

I've got dyscalculia, Connie. Can't speak for anyone else's, but I'd count it as a secondary condition, personally. Because I can't read maps, do higher math...


Shir - Nov 21, 2009 11:42:55 am PST #1252 of 30000
"And that's why God Almighty gave us fire insurance and the public defender".

"Hey, this would be a nifty way to categorize people in order to stratify them and match them up with the hierarchical job system we've formed post industrial revolution!"

Don't. Even. Get. Me. Started.

Singed,
enthusiast-on-her-way-to-be-educated historian of the 19th century-among-others, and student of sociology who attends "Organizations and Society" class


Zenkitty - Nov 21, 2009 11:46:55 am PST #1253 of 30000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

I just realized, I don't actually add/multiply numbers; I've just memorized the answers to most of the problems. I cannot multiply anything above the 6's. 6x8? I have no idea; I'd have to work it out. Yet, I scored 640 on the math part of the SAT. I test well.


Steph L. - Nov 21, 2009 11:47:04 am PST #1254 of 30000
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

no sense of the passage of time, gets obsessed over weird and small details, and suffers from both hyperfocus and an utter lack of focus, depending on the task

That... sounds rather like me. Hm.

That sounds like ADD. t /notadoctor


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Nov 21, 2009 11:49:47 am PST #1255 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

It's sometimes more complex than just being too gifted to think in standard ways. I have a definite mathematical learning difficulty. I am practically innumerate, and not great even with mathematical concepts that don't involve arithmetic. I had four years of one-to-one math lessons, and I still can't calculate change. You can imagine what statistics classes are like for me. I'm also dyslexic (in particular, I read at about half the average speed, and the words move around on the page, although a green transparent overlay helps with that a bit), and borderline Asperger's (with all the literalism, poor social skills etc that goes with that). Yet I was always the first in my class at many subjects, I'm on course for a distinction in my MA (not easy to get, at all) and I have verbal reasoning capabilities that totally floored the psychologist who assessed me (which was only two years ago, incidentally).

But, yeah - it's definitely two sides of the coin. Neurological diversity is cool.

Hil, re writing by hand, hypermobility can cause issues with the motor skills involved with writing. I couldn't write by hand for years, still find it painful, but I can type for hours.

Twice edited for spelling. Not ironically.


Hil R. - Nov 21, 2009 11:51:31 am PST #1256 of 30000
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

I also utterly confused teachers my first few years of elementary school by being able to read several grade levels ahead, but being completely incapable of sounding out words. Ask me to spell a word that I'd seen written before and I'd have no problem. Ask to to spell a word that I'd only heard but never seen, and I wouldn't know where to start. Same thing with reading -- I read books by recognizing the shapes of the words, and I had a good enough memory that I could recognize the shapes of a whole lot of words. But a word I'd never seen before, I couldn't look at the individual letters and remember "every letter makes a sound" and figure out what it was. Eventually, I just got old enough that teacher were no longer focusing on the mechanics of reading and just didn't notice that I didn't read the "right" way. This caused a ton of problems when I got to high school biology and was confronted with a textbook full of words I'd never seen before.


Zenkitty - Nov 21, 2009 11:52:10 am PST #1257 of 30000
Every now and then, I think I might actually be a little odd.

That sounds like ADD.

What? There was a cat outside -- oh, hey, Antiques Roadshow is on. I ought to get that old oak table -- What? I'm supposed to be working? It's been three hours already? Oh.

Yeah. Well, you might be right.


Hil R. - Nov 21, 2009 11:53:11 am PST #1258 of 30000
Sometimes I think I might just move up to Vermont, open a bookstore or a vegan restaurant. Adam Schlesinger, z''l

Hil, re writing by hand, hypermobility can cause issues with the motor skills involved with writing. I couldn't write by hand for years, still find it painful, but I can type for hours.

Yeah, it was partially the physical issues, and partially that I'd just lose my train of thought because I had to concentrate so much on remembering how to form each letter.


Seska (the Watcher-in-Training) - Nov 21, 2009 11:54:23 am PST #1259 of 30000
"We're all stories, in the end. Just make it a good one, eh?"

Hil - Ooh, ooh, me too. I was recognising words visually, like the 'Kelloggs' on the cereal box, aged under 2 - but standard ways of learning to read were useless. My creative parents still had me reading before school, via flashcards and Mr Men books and the like.


Steph L. - Nov 21, 2009 11:55:13 am PST #1260 of 30000
Unusually and exceedingly peculiar and altogether quite impossible to describe

That sounds like ADD.

What? There was a cat outside -- oh, hey, Antiques Roadshow is on. I ought to get that old oak table -- What? I'm supposed to be working? It's been three hours already? Oh.

Yeah. Well, you might be right.

I live with it every day. The hyperfocus/extreme distractability, the way time is not a fixed measure, the way little fiddly details are suddenly the most important thing in the world ever and have to be taken care of right now or OMG the fucking world will END.

I know that not all people with those characteristics have ADD. But Occam's razor suggests that it just might be. t /stillnotadoctor