• @DaddleDew
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    452 months ago

    Sometimes I know it’s a joke or sarcasm but I pretend to take it seriously because it don’t know how to react to it otherwise.

  • @[email protected]
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    352 months ago

    “I can’t be autistic, I understand sarcasm.” Until I realised that I’m heavily context dependent and no I don’t understand sarcasm unless I know for certain that it is sarcasm.

  • @[email protected]
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    262 months ago

    I’ve done this my whole life. I think it’s a form of masking. You cover both sides. If it was a joke you are like yeah I was continuing it. If it wasn’t you just say you thought they were being sarcastic and misunderstood.

  • Victor
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    212 months ago

    “Notes”? Is this from Bluesky? Threads?

      • moosetwin
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        402 months ago

        Tumblr screenshots, in my 196 community?

        It’s more likely than you think.

      • Victor
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        102 months ago

        I do… after some kind people told me that’s the case.

        You do realize, in order for someone to recognize something, they must have seen it once before, right?

        I’ve not used Tumblr before in my life, and I don’t care to do so before I die.

        lol

        👍👍

          • @Wilzax
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            12 months ago

            Not even everyone knows this one by 30 either, so they’re more like one of today’s lucky 1000

        • @[email protected]
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          02 months ago

          I’ve literally only been exposed to it via screenshots back on Reddit and now here.

          I don’t think it was ever a big thing in Australia though

        • Victor
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          21 month ago

          lmao, right!

  • @Got_Bent
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    212 months ago

    I’ve taken to deadpan saying, “I can’t tell if you’re joking or not.”

    Doesn’t work well with strangers, but it works with people who know me and have some level of understanding of the whole thing.

    • @[email protected]
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      12 months ago

      I mean it only “works” in the sense of countering the awkwardness.

      But sarcasm and subtle communication is an intentional risk. For one person to attempt risky communication (easy to misinterpret) and then for the other person to pick it up correctly deepens the bond between people.

      That’s why we have sarcasm. It’s why we have subtle jokes. It’s a constant refinement of the communication channel via tighter and tighter tolerances being practiced.

      When you say “I can’t tell if you’re joking” it’s great because it avoids the awkwardness, but the danger of awkwardness is the source of the benefit. So basically you’re saying “I’m not up for an adventure right now”. Which is “safe” in the short term, but it stunts the growth of the relationship.

      Autist to autist, my recommendation is to go out on a limb more often and take a chance with committing to one interpretation. It’s a risk-reward thing.

  • The Snark Urge
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    152 months ago

    Oh cool, a meme can make my cheek twitch

  • monsterpiece42
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    132 months ago

    OP what makes you think you’re not? This post is autistic AF, as someone autistic.

    I’m very high masking when I choose to be (sometimes when I’m not… it’s sort of automatic by nature at times) and in a lot of cases people never know. I was in my 30s before I figured it out, and I used to use the saying “I’m not autistic but” a lot.

    There are free tests available. AMA (not a pro but I have over 30yrs experience!)

    • @[email protected]OP
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      62 months ago

      I was diagnosed with autism at a young age, but that actually turned out to be a different thing (xxy), so I no longer have the diagnosis. So it’s still possible, but not probable, more likely partly a result of xxy and not autism.

      • monsterpiece42
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        41 month ago

        Interesting, thanks for sharing. I have heard of xxy, but not how it can look neurodivergent, so that will be my light reading for the evening!

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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    62 months ago

    I think part of it for me is in hearing the joke, I hear the subject reduced to simplicity, in some cases with ugly stereotypes, so I feel compelled to explain the nuance.

    A recent example came up when someone made a 72 virgins joke recently (the promised heavenly reward for a muslim man who lives rightly features seventy-two concubines)

    And as a result, I broke into an explanation of Houri (but spared them the complexities of jihad ).

  • @[email protected]
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    52 months ago

    And it’s always awkward to explain I’m also joking. Most times I just pretend I’m being serious just to save myself the hassle of explaining I was actually continuing the joke

  • @iamtrashman1312
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    1 month ago

    This is interesting, because I have the same things happen with different reasons behind them. Responding to a joke as though I didn’t understand it was one is something I find internally amusing, and my own sense of humor is pretty dry/deadpan so people do miss sometimes when I’m “joking back” as it were

    I think the dividing line is the intensity/frequency, unless one knows one is diagnosed. My coworkers for example pick up on the differences in the way I talk when I’m joking vs sincere pretty quick, and likewise learn that I find some small amusing in being irritating now and again

    • @chuckleslord
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      52 months ago

      Maybe don’t do that. Using it to cover being an inadvertent dick, that’s fine. Using it as an excuse to be a dick is a dick move.

      • @[email protected]
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        02 months ago

        I call people on their shit, autistic or whatever they want to call it. They get a pass on all kinds of inappropriate things, if they want to be treated equally then they will get their wish