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Feb 24

I am aware I have a subtlety different style of communication and can see how it contributes to social anxiety. I tend to stare at the floor and listen. This way, I can usually get the context of a conversation from the tonality of the audio cues in language. It is how I learned to compensate for my disability. As a person who worked in sound for years, it seems an obvious choice.

While I don’t have a natural ability to follow some other social cues, I can apply logic. Most of the time this works. If I concentrate , I can usually figure out facial expressions pretty well. For some reason I am anger blind and fail to notice if I am really annoying someone. In familiar situations where I have learned other people’s patterns and probabilities, I fare much better.

I am also more comfortable if I have someone neurologically typical to ask for assistance when I get stuck on something. Occasionally things go way over my head and I nod and pretend.

For me, most of my anxiety stems from a feeling of not knowing. It is a bit bewildering to miss simple social cues. It makes me feel foolish and stupid if I miss something obvious. Especially when people are joking or conversation is ambiguous or metaphorical. I get angry at myself, then embarrassed and anxious.

It is important to me to be a good communicator, I have a special interest in becoming more social. I am working on improving the way I interact with people. And recently I am discovering the way I assess myself and social situations is not working for me.

Because of the way my high functioning autistic mind works, I am very good at focusing on fine detail and learning it. But I cannot seem to learn every combination of every facial expression logically. There is only so much I can figure out.

While I am learning to accept I will always make mistakes socially, I don’t want to feel like I am putting up with it. I understand that neurologically typical people have an intuitive knowledge in social interaction I somehow miss. It is called mind blindness. Sometimes I miss the meaning of a word, sometimes I miss a facial expression and sometimes miss the entire context. That is how it is and acceptance is being okay with that. It’s a choice. Like choosing a thoroughbred sports car, great on the open roads but it tends to overheat and stall in traffic.

So here I am in traffic. I just arrived at a bustling party with friends eager to say hello. And here I am doing the social equivalent of my first driving lesson in an E type Jag.

The Aspie solution of course, if I know enough stuff I can make it.

The average English speaker possesses a vocabulary of 10,000 to 20,000 words out of around a million estimated words in the English language.

Imagine you could make words out of any combination of letters, then imagine there were no rules in language, then thinking only about four letter words…

There are 26!/22! possible combinations of four letters in a 26 letter character set. Which gives 358,799 alternative four letter words to the word fu*k. So why do I keep saying that!?!?!?! Sorry mum, I promised I wouldn’t. Ahem…

Given that the longest recorded word is 189,819 letters (the chemical name of titin, the largest known protein), if we were to work out all possible combinations of letters up to and including words of this length, it is fairly easy to see there is infinite possibility of combinations of letters that could be used to make words. My calculator got jammed even trying.

But bear with me here, this is going somewhere.

Spoken language (the part of communication I am good at) with all its infinite probability accounts for a very small percentage of face to face communication. I think the NLP guys say seven percent.

It seems to me that there are language patterns I repeat, (yes mother, I am working on it). To learn written language, I had to sound out the words, yet now I recognise them instantly. I cannot choose to not recognise a written word. I can even read and write backwards, mirrored, upside down, left handed and pretty much any combination of those.

So let’s say for a moment I want to learn to read another visual language, facial expressions. What if autistic minds are over focused (stuck on) the building blocks. What if we are still sounding them out, or worse still don’t even know my alphabet. What if we could learn more about the building blocks using the Facial Action Coding System? Or perhaps a specialised simplified version that takes a clear look at 5 or 6 major muscle groups. Perhaps I need to lift up my head and start studying faces.

The problem with neurologically typical people is, they freak out when I stare at them. I don’t naturally know how much eye/face contact is enough/too much. There is no damn logic to it when I focus on the details. Again, perhaps there is something else to get about the overall patterns of social interaction here?

People tend to follow very predictable patterns and then, they don’t.

See you on the other side of the looking glass,

mark ty wharton


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Feb 19

I am on a path of discovery and as I start to write my book on enlightenment, I realise as a race of beings, we have an agreement with our gurus which totally negates our experience.

We also negate the gurus experience (for them).

Enlightenment, as far as I can tell, only exists in agreement, or language.

Agreements about reality, the way things are – languaging experience, negates experience.

Each judgement or comparison, every assessment, each lesson about what enlightenment is and what it is not takes the seeker further from the truth.

So can I teach you the truth?

What stands between me, you and the truth is language.

For me to express my experience, I need to language it while being an example of that which I wish to express.

My “style” of communication is “I am brilliant and I am going to prove it to you”. And “question me and I will defend my position”.

My commitment is to give up this way of being with you.

The knowledge I wish to impart to you is, you have already had an experience that humans have an agreement in language for called enlightenment.

Listening to the directions of spiritual teachers won’t help you, or them.

Don’t listen to me either. My expression of enlightenment will negate your experience of it such that you could follow me forever trying to find an answer.

The only thing between me and your wallet is my integrity.

See you on the other side of the looking glass,

Mark Ty-Wharton

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Nov 22

I have been writing about my mood swings of late. Actually, they are nothing new, I have just noticed them more in the past few weeks.

Often awareness gives us the power to change, by whatever means. However, looking back at my posts, I decided to delete them.

While it is a severe situation, the posts were not a report of the facts, they were a complaint.

Just because I have the technology to type, even when I don’t want to get out of bed, doesn’t mean I should.

I justified my posts by telling myself, “if I am authentic about my experiences, it might help someone else”.

But what if, a problem shared is a problem doubled?

I am not saying people shouldn’t seek help, I am saying help should be sought from an appropriate person.

I think the analogy is “only complain to someone who can do something about it”.

Except this is where it falls off. When there is nobody prepared to do anything about it, who do you turn to?

FACT 1: In the UK there is no treatment available for autistic adults (unless they have some other condition).

FACT 2: Autistic adults with mental health disorders are generally treated using the same basic criteria that would be applied to a neurologically typical adult.

I don’t need to spell out the pitfalls of that one!

FACT 3: Many doctors still believe “there is no such thing as Asperger Syndrome”.

Because they have a different style of communication, autistic adults need a different route into the system.

At least one doctor at any practice could be trained to understand autism. Doctors with a partner with an interest could display a sign.

After forty odd years of appearing to be OK, I pretend to fit in.

It takes a person with considerable skill and understanding to get that I don’t.

So who do I complain to?

I don’t want to set up a campaign to deal with the issue. However, if you do, I want to speak at your events!

See you on the other side of the looking glass,

mark ty-wharton

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