Can we put "how much time do you spend worrying if you are being misunderstood?" on the list of autism diagnostic questions?

Being misunderstood is my greatest fear in life, & I'm pretty sure autistic trauma is why.

"How often do you feel like you need to clarify things you say with very specific language?"

Here's a good one: "Do people often claim that you said something which you *definitely* did not say & get mad at you, even though you chose your language very specifically to try to make your meaning *abundantly* clear?"

"Do conversations with a single individual sometimes feel like a game of 'telephone' because the other person keeps incorrectly paraphrasing things you say?"

I have no idea how many hours of my life I have spent explaining to people that I didn't say the thing that they are saying that I did, but it's fucking stressful as hell.

Among other things, people seem to think all words with an overlapping semantic range are interchangeable, so you'll choose to use one that is specific to what you mean & then they substitute a different word with significantly different connotations & don't even seem to notice.

One of the cruelest jokes on autistic people is that we are so frequently misunderstood that a lot of us develop a full on *obsession* with all the nuances of language & then our very carefully nuanced & intentional speech gets misinterpreted *anyway*, & it's like "what do you people want from me? I've spent my whole life constantly thinking about language & how it is used! How is it so hard to understand me?"
Different side of this same problem: sometimes when talking with an allistic person, you may quote their *exact words* back to them *verbatim*, & they will argue they didn't say that & get upset that you are being so "pedantic".

I wish I had known when I was younger that my brain was just working differently & more sensitively tuned to some things allistic people miss & less capable of picking up other things which allistic people do pay attention to.

It's fucking hard to be painfully sincere & honest & then despite your best efforts be accused of trying to manipulate a conversation.

It would have been nice to know it's not a character flaw.

@artemis OMG you put it into words. This. So much this. I could've had my diagnosis decades earlier.

@artemis I feel so seen right now!

I spend so much effort on choosing my words, and despite that I tend to follow almost everything I say with "Does that make sense?"

I probably ask that question at least 100 times a day. Just trying to fight this constant fear of being misunderstood...

@artemis
Indeed. Especially that not understanding what they meant, because it wasn't what they actually said, wasn't our fault or lack, but that we were simply different and definitely not broken.

@artemis

You are completely correct in your observations.

Speaking as a mostly allistic with some ND traits, I hate being misunderstood, or worse, "accused" of saying that which I specifically did not.

The feeling is real.

Best I can offer in terms of explanation is that allistics use lossy compression all the time without realizing it.

Both their speech, yours, compression artifacts abound and compound with each turn of conversation.

It's assumed efficiency at a cost in accuracy.

@pseudonym @artemis

I don't know where I fall. I think I'm an allistic but I'm definitely quirky so who knows?

But I do know how I process/ recall conversations/ altercations - if there is any emotion to it, that's what gets remembered. It's never the actual words - it's just "the feels". I have been aware of this for many years now and I still can't recall specific words/ phrases even if I try to remember them at the time. It is emotional fuzz for me.

So perhaps it is not that people are trying to be more efficient but simply that their emotions are getting in the way of accurate memory/ recall.

Of course if they don't recognize or abettor that possiblity, it doesn't really help anything but I'm sharing my thoughts and lived experience in the hope that it helps us all see/ reach each other better.

@artemis I feel like this is related to the "you're overthinking it" thing.

...but yeah, NT people seem to get weird around clarity.

@artemis This whole thread resonates with me. It's been my experience pretty much beat-for-beat. And then after it happens I get to hear the people who lashed out at me complain that I'm bad at communicating, when they're the ones who put zero effort into it.

In the time and place where we live, there is no such thing as an untraumatized autistic adult.

@artemis Huh. This, I relate to.
@artemis allistic folks also tend to get VERY UPSET when you treat them exactly the same as they treat you.

@artemis

Then they'll say something that mean "yes, that was what I *said*, but it wasn't what I *meant*!"

And we're supposed to be the ones with communication difficulties...

@artemis All of this thread, all of the wounds we carry, all of the trauma.

But one relatively minor thing it reminded me of.

A time a friend remarked on not enjoying a movie that had come out some years ago.

We had seen it together in theaters.

So I was able to quote to him the more positive thing he had said at the time.

(He's cool, we've been friends 40 years, he believed me.)