aspergers and vaping.

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AXIOM_1

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    LOL, that's so Aspie of you. :lol:

    I don't know what you mean or how that is Aspie but I am glad you think it's awesome because it is!!!! It's a dual battery unit with 120Watts capability........... I have slowed down on cloud chucking these days but I just imagine I can really get the job done with this thing. Oh, it's temperature controlled too :thumbs: Just think, two batteries so I don't have to charge so often, plus all the power I need if I ever desire. It's got a magnetic door for the battery too which is way cool. The chip is one of the best programmable chips that Pioneer4 you puts out. It's also got a reversible screen layout and the whole nine yards. It's probably too much mod for me but I know I won't have to ever upgrade :) Not in the foreseeable future anyway.
     

    AXIOM_1

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    Wow, that sounds amazing. It's relatively new, isn't it?

    Brand spanking new...not even out of the boxes yet. He ordered them brand new and had them shipped to me. It's awesome of him to do that for me.... I think all my friends here should leave @Cognator a nice message because that was a very kind gesture on his part.
     

    amoret

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    Wow. Maybe the only place to have this discussion is the internet. I found out that I have Asperger's late in life When my grandson was diagnosed I immediately got a bunch of books on the subject (clue 1) and started reading. I wasn't very far into the research when I said "Hey, this is my biography." Doing more research and some online testing, I figure that I'm probably a little further down on the ASD scale, but I've never bothered with a formal diagnosis since I'm 64 now and a diagnosis isn't really going to change anything.

    As an online quiz I strongly recommend Aspergers Adult AQ Test Quiz Online: Autism Spectrum Quotient since it is relatively detailed, no strings and gives an immediate result. It seems to be fairly accurate.

    I've already had most of the problems in life that Asperger's/Autism (I think that Asperger's has now been officially folded into Autism Spectrum Disorders scale) and I've adapted to some of them (staring at a point just over the nose makes people think that you're looking them "in the eye" for example) and been functionally disabled by others, but I'm in a fairly comfortable spot now.

    I live alone and most of my contact with the outside world is now by computer - I actually like Facebook, probably because I have a small assortment of friends, most of whom were part of my life in the past and a few I've "met" through my other friends "liking their posts" or suggesting them to me. I also belong to two closed groups of people with the same odd physical problem I've had for the last five years - also a great use of the internet, since we are scattered all over the world and would never meet someone with the same diagnosis otherwise.

    Back to ASD there is definitely a genetic component. My daughter has been formally diagnosed after her son was, there's me, and I strongly suspect one of my brothers, my mother, an uncle, and my grandfather on the maternal side.

    Please note that going on and on in text is one of my symptoms - that and I'm the queen of parenthetical remarks. I had started with a bunch of multi quotes, but I could have done most of the thread that way. Here are some that especially got my attention.

    Some of us have not a clue what Aspergers really is.
    Even though it may be why we have has a largely miserable life.

    That was me until after my grandson's diagnosis - see above. Knowing isn't going to change anything now but it is such a strong validation. Just the fact of not being alone in this is a major relief/help. We're fairly close to the same age, and when we were young Autism was only diagnosed for people with the most severe problems. We were just told to buck up, buckle down, try harder, get along better, etc.

    It has been amazing to see how much help early diagnosis has been for my grandson. He has gotten training in how to develop (or at least fake) some of the social skills, has had IEPs in school and been on that list of kids that teachers get, so at least they have known what his issues were and how to best react for some of them. There's no cure, but he learned skills at a very young age that I had to figure out very slowly as an adult.

    Most Asperger people have jobs and are often highly successful in business. Lots of the people who have severe forms of autism are diagnosed at a young age because it is obvious that they are not normal. Adult Asperger people on the other hand function almost the same way as anyone else and can go their entire lives without getting a diagnosis because it is not evident that anything is amiss with them.

    But it can take a lot of luck and/or trials to get there. I had a very hard time getting and holding jobs before I figured out which areas worked for me and which didn't.

    My jobs have forced me to be more social.
    Can't say i enjoy it.
    Then i run home and hide.
    But i do ok at work

    It took a lot of fairly disastrous attempts for me to figure out what I could and couldn't deal with. Oddly enough, some very people oriented jobs did work, and I finally figured out hat it was the ones where I had the knowledge or ability and they were asking me for help. I absolutely couldn't do any type of cold call work where I had to start the interaction.

    Things I could do were specialty sales (I once managed and then owned a garden center) and bar-tending. Where I came into my own was working with computer software, before formal computer degrees even touched on PCs. I started with databases, got into doing formal tech support and some web design.

    I live in eastern KY and do not even own any Camo anything.....
    I do have guns and like to target shoot and such. just no desire to kill anything. except mosquitoes :evil:

    A professor friend of my mother's once confessed that while he did go pheasant and quail hunting he never shot at any birds. It was just a great and socially acceptable way for him to take long autumn walks with his dogs.

    When I was in high school I did quite a lot of "fishing" after I discovered that I could take a boat out on the lake to read by myself, and if I had a fishing pole out people would quit bugging me about whether I was okay. I even did catch some fish inadvertently.

    yes and still pretty much that way as an adult.

    This (ECF) is pretty much my social outlet. I am a Facebook cripple.

    I even do okay with Facebook. Asynchronous communication is great. I don't have to participate, but when I do there is no need for back and forth. I can consider what I'm going to say and, unlike verbal communication, I can edit before I "say" it.

    Well, maybe that's a sensitivity to aural stimulous. I have some tactile sensitivities. Sensitivities to stimuli occurs alot in the autism spectrum.

    Mine is olfactory. One thing I don't like about not smoking is that my sense of smell is much better now. That was an issue on previous quit attempts, but not as much with vaping. Maybe vaping reduces the sense of smell somewhat, too.

    Okay, a long enough book. I'll be back though. Asperger's/Autism has become one of my intense interests now.
     

    AXIOM_1

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    Well, open the box! Did you get the black one?

    Heck, I don't know...I haven't even opened the outside package yet lol .... He told me he was going to be sending me a gift for helping him get into vaping (which I don't think he should have did) but I didn't have a clue what he was sending until he told me in an email today.... Then the thing also arrived today.......... He bought me one of those nice Triton tanks as well and I have never used one of them. I can't hardly wait.... But I want to get my miserable camera going and things arranged before I mess with the new stuff. No worries I will post everything on here later today so you can see the stuff.
     

    AXIOM_1

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    What do you think of your IPV 2? It's on sale for $20-something, and I was considering it.

    $20 something! Where do you shop, I paid almost $70 for mine.......... I love the IPV 2 and it's a power house for how small it is. It a pretty small single battery mod but a very reliable one. I love anything that is IPV because they are true and tested through the course of time.
     

    AXIOM_1

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  • Jul 6, 2015
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    Wow. Maybe the only place to have this discussion is the internet. I found out that I have Asperger's late in life When my grandson was diagnosed I immediately got a bunch of books on the subject (clue 1) and started reading. I wasn't very far into the research when I said "Hey, this is my biography." Doing more research and some online testing, I figure that I'm probably a little further down on the ASD scale, but I've never bothered with a formal diagnosis since I'm 64 now and a diagnosis isn't really going to change anything.

    As an online quiz I strongly recommend Aspergers Adult AQ Test Quiz Online: Autism Spectrum Quotient since it is relatively detailed, no strings and gives an immediate result. It seems to be fairly accurate.

    I've already had most of the problems in life that Asperger's/Autism (I think that Asperger's has now been officially folded into Autism Spectrum Disorders scale) and I've adapted to some of them (staring at a point just over the nose makes people think that you're looking them "in the eye" for example) and been functionally disabled by others, but I'm in a fairly comfortable spot now.

    I live alone and most of my contact with the outside world is now by computer - I actually like Facebook, probably because I have a small assortment of friends, most of whom were part of my life in the past and a few I've "met" through my other friends "liking their posts" or suggesting them to me. I also belong to two closed groups of people with the same odd physical problem I've had for the last five years - also a great use of the internet, since we are scattered all over the world and would never meet someone with the same diagnosis otherwise.

    Back to ASD there is definitely a genetic component. My daughter has been formally diagnosed after her son was, there's me, and I strongly suspect one of my brothers, my mother, an uncle, and my grandfather on the maternal side.

    Please note that going on and on in text is one of my symptoms - that and I'm the queen of parenthetical remarks. I had started with a bunch of multi quotes, but I could have done most of the thread that way. Here are some that especially got my attention.



    That was me until after my grandson's diagnosis - see above. Knowing isn't going to change anything now but it is such a strong validation. Just the fact of not being alone in this is a major relief/help. We're fairly close to the same age, and when we were young Autism was only diagnosed for people with the most severe problems. We were just told to buck up, buckle down, try harder, get along better, etc.

    It has been amazing to see how much help early diagnosis has been for my grandson. He has gotten training in how to develop (or at least fake) some of the social skills, has had IEPs in school and been on that list of kids that teachers get, so at least they have known what his issues were and how to best react for some of them. There's no cure, but he learned skills at a very young age that I had to figure out very slowly as an adult.



    But it can take a lot of luck and/or trials to get there. I had a very hard time getting and holding jobs before I figured out which areas worked for me and which didn't.



    It took a lot of fairly disastrous attempts for me to figure out what I could and couldn't deal with. Oddly enough, some very people oriented jobs did work, and I finally figured out hat it was the ones where I had the knowledge or ability and they were asking me for help. I absolutely couldn't do any type of cold call work where I had to start the interaction.

    Things I could do were specialty sales (I once managed and then owned a garden center) and bar-tending. Where I came into my own was working with computer software, before formal computer degrees even touched on PCs. I started with databases, got into doing formal tech support and some web design.



    A professor friend of my mother's once confessed that while he did go pheasant and quail hunting he never shot at any birds. It was just a great and socially acceptable way for him to take long autumn walks with his dogs.

    When I was in high school I did quite a lot of "fishing" after I discovered that I could take a boat out on the lake to read by myself, and if I had a fishing pole out people would quit bugging me about whether I was okay. I even did catch some fish inadvertently.



    I even do okay with Facebook. Asynchronous communication is great. I don't have to participate, but when I do there is no need for back and forth. I can consider what I'm going to say and, unlike verbal communication, I can edit before I "say" it.



    Mine is olfactory. One thing I don't like about not smoking is that my sense of smell is much better now. That was an issue on previous quit attempts, but not as much with vaping. Maybe vaping reduces the sense of smell somewhat, too.

    Okay, a long enough book. I'll be back though. Asperger's/Autism has become one of my intense interests now.

    Yeah thanks for sharing and please join our little discussion thread here. We need all of the Aspies we can get to collect here.
     
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    AXIOM_1

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    It was in the deals & steals this morning, and it's $19.99. So, that's a yes, it would be worth going considering?

    well if you want a no frills and thrills type of a mod then yes absolutely....It doesn't have temp control or any of the fancy things. You can adjust the wattage and that's about it. Very simple interface with a bright screen. The form factor is very small and so it would be good for most women's hands.
     

    Scotticus93

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    I'm not sure who you are referring to by "we". I don't have Asperger's but I feel like I have a good sense of humor. So do all kinds of people, and even some of the animals I've lived with (mostly birds). Humor is great medicine, and that might be related to your observation. More of an indulgence than a knack, possibly.
    I wasn't saying other people don't have good sense of humor. Kind of like someone was saying something about having mental gifts. Well everyone does. But a lot of autistic and asbergers people I've met make great jokes and like to laugh. Just something I've noticed. I know everyone does but it's like. Different IMO. I could be wrong.
     

    dcfluegel

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    Hey dudes/dudettes, you all want to hear a really groovy thing that just happened to me? Good, because I am going to tell you anyway. :)

    Today in the mail just arrived a brand new IPV4s Mod along with a brand new Triton tank and I never even ordered the stuff. Nope, totally free of charge...... I found out that my brother @Cognator who just joined this forum sent them to me as a gift!! He ordered them from Amazon brand new and had them shipped to me. Now what kind of a cool brother is that I tell you!? I haven't even taken the stuff out of the packages yet but I will after bit and when I fire the thing up I will put some photos on here. I am also going to make a post in the General conversations area about what my brother has done for me. I am way excited to blast away on the thing.
    that is awesome!
     

    NoFumus

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    I wasn't saying other people don't have good sense of humor. Kind of like someone was saying something about having mental gifts. Well everyone does. But a lot of autistic and asbergers people I've met make great jokes and like to laugh. Just something I've noticed. I know everyone does but it's like. Different IMO. I could be wrong.

    I think that's a great observation because there's at one stereotype of asperger's/autism, where they're too socially isolated to understand a joke let along make one. That's just not true though, as you've said, and this group is a testament to that sense of humor.
     

    nicnik

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    I wasn't saying other people don't have good sense of humor. Kind of like someone was saying something about having mental gifts. Well everyone does. But a lot of autistic and asbergers people I've met make great jokes and like to laugh. Just something I've noticed. I know everyone does but it's like. Different IMO. I could be wrong.
    There may be a difference in the style of humor and the types of connections made. Making connections is a big part of a lot of humor, and I suspect a difference in style that you, and I too, identify with. I tend to get obsessive with joking, and often have a bit of difficulty putting a lid on it when it is inappropriate. I also reckognize I use and seek humor often as a form of medicating myself.
     

    Scotticus93

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    There may be a difference in the style of humor and the types of connections made. Making connections is a big part of a lot of humor, and I suspect a difference in style that you, and I too, identify with. I tend to get obsessive with joking, and often have a bit of difficulty putting a lid on it when it is inappropriate. I also reckognize I use and seek humor often as a form of medicating myself.
    Wait so what is your condition? And I agree. I can make connections with some people and others don't get my humor at all. I'm just trying to keep this thread light hearted. We can see we are "medicated" and what not. But I believe there is nothing wrong with us. We may be "different" or "weird" but everyone is different. No reason to wallow in our differences but just be the best people we can be
     

    nicnik

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    As an online quiz I strongly recommend Aspergers Adult AQ Test Quiz Online: Autism Spectrum Quotient since it is relatively detailed, no strings and gives an immediate result. It seems to be fairly accurate.
    I took the test. My score was 27, but the autistic features that are most at the core of Asperger's are very mild in me and overcome with smarts, as others have already discussed in this thread. If I fit at all in the autism spectrum, it's not Asperger's, but more of the non-specific, or how ever it is they word that classification. However, I really fit perfectly into definitions of Tourette's, OCD and ADD (with a little bit of the "H" in ADHD), and I strongly identify with those.

    There's a lot of overlap between ADD and autism, and especially between OCD and autism. Tourette Syndrome is often accompanied by ADD and even more often OCD.
     
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    nicnik

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    Wait so what is your condition? And I agree. I can make connections with some people and others don't get my humor at all. I'm just trying to keep this thread light hearted. We can see we are "medicated" and what not. But I believe there is nothing wrong with us. We may be "different" or "weird" but everyone is different. No reason to wallow in our differences but just be the best people we can be
    Nice message. I have TS/OCD/ADD and not very mild, especially the OCD.

    I really identify with the part of your message I put in bold type.
     
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