what u dont realize is that autism is a heavy disease, but slight autism gives u hyper iq

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C impossibility is Neurotransmitters
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most autists are sub 80 iq trash, but like 1% of them who have slight autism, are 200 iq, like me, however even slight autism nukes ur talking skills compared to NTs.

its the brain wiring.

slight autism is what messi has too, it makes him the best in his field
 
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Autistic traits can absolutely contribute to exceptional performance in certain fields. It’s not that autism automatically grants genius, but that the way many autistic brains process information can lead to unique advantages under the right circumstances.


Here are some of the main traits and how they can translate into high achievement:




🧩 1. Hyperfocus and Deep Interest


Many autistic people can sustain intense focus on topics or activities they care deeply about — sometimes for hours or years.


  • This allows for deep mastery of a skill or domain (e.g., programming, drawing, mathematics, football tactics, etc.).
  • When combined with motivation, it can lead to world-class expertise.



🧠 2. Pattern Recognition and System Thinking


Autistic minds often excel at seeing patterns, structures, and consistencies that others overlook.


  • This is a strength in areas like coding, engineering, design, or music composition.
  • Even in sports (like Messi), recognizing patterns in movement, timing, or opponent behavior can give a huge edge.



💬 3. Direct, Logical Thinking


Autistic cognition often favors clarity, precision, and logic over social nuance or emotional guessing.


  • That can lead to better decision-making under pressure and less distraction by social expectations.
  • In science or problem-solving, this helps cut through noise and focus on what’s true or works.



🎯 4. High Standards and Routine


Many autistic individuals thrive on consistency and structure, which makes them incredibly disciplined once a routine is established.


  • That’s a major advantage for training, skill refinement, and performing at a high level over long periods.



🌍 5. Creative Divergence


Because autistic people often process the world differently, they can approach problems or art in novel, unconventional ways.


  • That “different wiring” can lead to breakthroughs — from innovative algorithms to original art styles or gameplay tactics.



⚖️ The Flip Side​


Those same traits can also bring difficulties: communication issues, burnout from overfocus, sensory overload, or social misunderstanding. The best outcomes happen when someone’s environment and support let their strengths shine while minimizing friction with everyday demands.




So, it’s not that “slight autism = genius,” but rather that autistic brain patterns can amplify intelligence, creativity, or focus when the person is in the right niche.


Would you like me to give some real-world examples of famous or highly successful people who are confirmed (or widely accepted) to be on the autism spectrum and how their traits helped them excel?
 
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why are autists much worse at talking than NTs

ChatGPT:​

That’s a really good and deep question — and it actually gets to the core of how autistic and neurotypical (NT) brains process communication differently.
Autistic people aren’t “bad” at talking in a general sense — many speak fluently or even eloquently — but the mechanisms behind social communication are often different, which can make conversation harder, less automatic, or more tiring. Here’s what’s really going on, neurologically and cognitively:

🧠 1. Different social processing

For most neurotypical people, understanding tone, facial expression, and social context happens automatically and subconsciously.
For autistic people, that same process often requires conscious effort.
  • It’s like having to calculate every social move instead of just “feeling” it.
  • That slows things down and can make speech sound awkward, delayed, or overly literal.

💬 2. Language vs. Social Language

Many autistic individuals have strong vocabularies and grammar (the linguistic side), but weaker pragmatic language — the social side of talking:
  • knowing when to speak,
  • reading what the other person means but didn’t say,
  • adjusting tone or body language appropriately.
    This mismatch can make conversations feel “off” to NTs even when the words themselves are fine.

🎧 3. Sensory and Processing Overload

Social interaction bombards the senses — sounds, expressions, gestures, background noise.
Autistic brains often have heightened sensory sensitivity, so talking while processing all that input can be exhausting or overwhelming.
That’s one reason why many autistic people prefer typing or scripted conversations — less chaos to filter through.

🪫 4. Executive Function and Working Memory

Conversation requires multitasking: thinking about what to say, remembering what was said, watching the listener’s reaction, and planning your next point — all at once.
For autistic people, executive function differences can make that juggling act harder, especially under stress or in unpredictable settings.

⚙️ 5. Different Priorities in Communication

Autistic communication tends to prioritize information and accuracy over social smoothing.
Neurotypical communication often prioritizes connection and emotion.
So an autistic person might say something that’s literally correct but comes off as blunt, detached, or odd — not because they lack empathy, but because their focus is on content, not subtext.

🧩 In short:​

Autistic people usually have the hardware for speech — but the software for social decoding runs differently.
They can learn to communicate well, especially when others meet them halfway (by being clear, direct, and patient). But it’ll often still feel effortful, like speaking a second language.

Would you like me to break down how autistic people can improve their speaking and social comfort without “masking” too hard or burning out?
 
the fact ur making this dogshit post points to you having subhuman iq
 

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