2016-01-28 at 3:51 AM UTC
From the Intense World Theory paper:
The positive consequences are exceptional capabilities for elementary and specific tasks while the negative consequences are impairment of holistic processing, a rapid lock to a limited repertoire of behavioral routines, which are then repeated obsessively.
The autistic person may also become locked into powerful memories that are difficult to correct or extinguish and that dominate every-day life. Quick and almost arbitrary association building based on enhanced perception of sensory features paired with excessive internal emotions – positive or negative – may rapidly lock the person down into behavioral routines. A failure to extinguish such associations may underlie the insistence on sameness and obsession with routines and may make rehabilitation difficult.
Enhanced fear memory formation and a progressive generalization of fears could have major consequences on behavior and account for inappropriate reactions to the environment, sudden and apparently inexplicable anxiety attacks, loss of the finesse required in social interactions, and phobias. Over-generalization may also accelerate the progression in autism by more rapidly limiting the repertoire of safe stimuli, environments, and situations. While deficits in extinction were previously observed in autistic children (Mullins and Rincover, 1985; Sears et al., 1994; Coldren and Halloran, 2003) and may lead to preservation tendencies observed in autism, fear extinction was never studied in autism. If present, a deficit in extinguishing acquired fear in autism would make it more difficult to relinquish old fears that are no longer relevant or justifiable. This deficit combined with longer-lasting fear memories that are also over-generalized, could lead to a progressive and irreversible reduction in the repertoire of acceptable stimuli and drive a complete lock down and blanketing out of what would rapidly become a painfully intense world.
---
Remind you of anything? Reflect on your own life. Extreme sensitivity to negativity (girl leaving you, any negative events related to her, her flaws/negative behavior that you perceived), blowing things out of proportion, OCD traits making it worse, replaying thoughts and memories in your mind, obsessing over them.
Just telling you because the exact same thing has been a recurrent theme in my life, and it led to disaster.
2016-01-28 at 4:02 AM UTC
I don't have autism you fggt
2016-01-28 at 4:20 AM UTC
You admitted to being on the spectrum in the past. It is a spectrum, everyone can have autistic traits to some extent.
2016-01-28 at 4:29 AM UTC
If I'm on the spectrum it's so mild that none of these things matter enough to bother contemplating whether it's due to autism or not
2016-01-28 at 4:38 AM UTC
I dunno man, let's admit it, neither of us are quite healthy or normal. We both have problems, whatever they are and their root causes are. I mean, obsessing over a 1x year old girl for years like this isn't normal.
2016-01-28 at 4:49 AM UTC
You should make a facebook Malice, I know you're basically harmless and since you're terribly lonely and all you'd probably feel like you had more social interaction if you were able to talk to someone through actual chatting rather than one-sided postings.
2016-01-28 at 4:59 AM UTC
Aww. <3
I have one, but there's nothing on it. I've only ever used it for the "connect/sign up with facebook" feature.
2016-01-28 at 5:54 AM UTC
Don't you have a cat to fuck?
2016-01-28 at 8:04 AM UTC
At least you can be sure that she doesn't trick you for money.
2016-01-28 at 9:08 AM UTC
lol, who ever that is laughing, autism for sure.
I think you would be a youtube star if you filmed your life
2016-01-29 at 3:53 PM UTC
Ashley can be a blokes name, and some 'blokes' have high pitched voices.
Proof Confirmed OP is a Fag
2016-01-29 at 4:04 PM UTC
Please youtube your wacky adventurez