• @[email protected]
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    713 hours ago

    That’s the whole communication gap. When allistic people talk they will almost always lie or say something other than what they mean, which gives the other person the opportunity to lie or ignore what they meant if it suits them. This is what’s known as being “polite.”

    • @ArbiterXero
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      312 hours ago

      That’s an intentionally rigid view of the world.

      The communication gap is that rigidity.

      For example, it may say “minimum requirements” on the web form, but let’s put ourselves into the shoes of the person filling it out. Are they SUPER strict on these minimums? Or are they just filling out the form the best they can?

      Usually it says sobering along the lines of “ideal candidates” and not “bare minimum” but you likely won’t see that due to overly rigid views on the world.

      What if they made a mistake when filling it out, and added things to the “bare minimum “ that aren’t really that harsh a requirement?

      It’s a grey area, it’s not a direct lie and you know that, you just don’t like it.

      Saying it’s a lie assumes you know the intention of the person writing it, and that they intended to deceive you. And you can’t possibly know that either.

      It’s Not a lie and you’re misrepresenting your knowledge of the scenario when you say that.

      • @[email protected]
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        511 hours ago

        As an autistic I resolve this in my head by reminding myself that words can have different meanings.

        For example
        (“How are you?” -> “I’m fine how are you?” -> “Doing well, thanks”)
        actually means
        (“hello” -> “hello”)

        It’s code. The meaning is precise, and it’s not a false question. It’s a symbolic question.

        It’s an equivalent meaning in the same way that:
        (“hola” -> “hola”)
        means the same thing as
        (“hello” -> “hello”)

        English is, therefore, not just one language. English is many languages using the same set of words.

        • @ArbiterXero
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          410 hours ago

          Beautiful and thoughtful response.

          I’m peak ADHD, and I often use the same type of thing

    • @[email protected]
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      312 hours ago

      Wait hold on.

      Are you saying NT lie all the time or ND lie all the time?

      Because neither of those is true?

      Or if it is, it explains my ex a whole lot better

      • @[email protected]
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        11 hour ago

        NT people lie and or talk around what they mean rather than say it directly. Neurodivergent people, especially autistic people, are not like this and find it taxing to deal with.

    • notsure
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      213 hours ago

      …and the rules change at a whim, it is never consistent…

      • snooggums
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        213 hours ago

        Plus they vary massively from culture to culture and region to region, but are all treated as the right way to behave.