AUTISTIC PERSON takes ONLINE AUTISM TESTS... are they accurate?

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  • Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
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Комментарии • 958

  • @loops8274
    @loops8274 3 года назад +676

    Autism Test: "Do you have a hard time understanding what people really mean?"
    Paige: *Proceeds to have a hard time understanding what the question really means*
    Me: *Relates hard*

    • @leightonshelley
      @leightonshelley 2 года назад +20

      In order to truly, deeply understand what someone means by what they say, a person would need to be able to experience their brain/thoughts. Because the meanings people translate into words is only that: a translation, and the meanings they have to the words they use is something they learned through experience, an experience specifically unique to them. So, since everyone's human experience is different from one another, while we may be able to 'relate' to eachother through words, we can't ever really know the true extent of the meanings their inner-experience is truly trying to convey.
      Imagine an apple. The image you think of when you see the word apple is unique to you, and the one I imagine is unique to me, but if we described the image to one another, or pointed to something in reality analogous to what we imagined, we would probably agree that the images we imagined would still both fit under the word apple. But still, the meanings we associate with the word itself will have been proven to differ, even if slightly.
      Now, imagine we're both looking at a pen, and we both agree it has a red cap, and we both agree its a red pen. How that red even looks, to you, might be completely different than what red looks like to me, even while we both agree its red. I can never know how other people see the world, or if they are even self-conscious in the way I view/operate myself, because no-one can see, validate, or fully understand anyone, let alone the fact there is doubt we will also probably never fully understand ourselves, either.

    • @DarkHearts4
      @DarkHearts4 Год назад +2

      In that case, it was just because she didn't understand what the word meant, and that's not related to autism. The key word there was "persistently." The question wasn't asking about whether or not she has difficulty being sad (as would be implied by the word "sad") but whether or not those feelings of sadness are frequent, and, when and if they occur, whether or not they are persistent. This is just a case of someone lying about their "gifted" intelligence and hyperlexia.

    • @bubbleteabeatboxx
      @bubbleteabeatboxx Год назад +4

      @@leightonshelleyThis is beautiful. So insightful. Thank you.

    • @isabeanieboos5342
      @isabeanieboos5342 Год назад +1

      I do that

    • @notNajimi
      @notNajimi 6 месяцев назад

      @@DarkHearts4huh? misunderstands one word, must be a faker?

  • @elizabethgrey6040
    @elizabethgrey6040 3 года назад +2105

    I hate the tests because I often have much more complex answers than just “yes” or “no.” If it asks “do you often resist making eye contact” well the answer would be no, because I do try to make eye contact, but I dislike doing it and it stresses me out to think about it. But that’s not what the questions asks. Or if it asks “I dislike loud noises” well typically no I actually like louder noises (depending on the circumstance) like loud music, but that doesn’t mean I’m not overly sensitive- I’m EXTREMELY sensitive to touch. Often if it says “I lined up toys in categories rather than playing with them” well no I didn’t make lines of red toys and blue toys or something like that, but I would dress up and and customize my characters then not know what to do with them once I had finished placing them in a scene. So yeah, these tests are hard for me

    • @cheep5645
      @cheep5645 3 года назад +141

      Big same. I always have way too nuanced answers, especially when it’s binary choice

    • @elizabethgrey6040
      @elizabethgrey6040 3 года назад +230

      @@cheep5645 If anything, I feel like since autistic people often misunderstand and overthink instructions, these quizzes may be putting off the very people they’re trying to attract 😂

    • @nicolesaidi
      @nicolesaidi 3 года назад +11

      @@cheep5645 OMG YES

    • @alexrose20
      @alexrose20 3 года назад +37

      yes they really need to let autistic ppl write these tests istg

    • @aya_x9x
      @aya_x9x 3 года назад +54

      oh my god, yes, exactly! for real though, im sure all of these quizes are made with very little input from us autistics. most of these are put together loosely based on tiny fragments of data from "studies" and aggregate data from therapist/psychologists and such. such studies have rarely done much beyond nonsense like trying to find a cure, rarely about truly understanding us or trying to help improve the world to be more compatible with all kinds of peoples... all the while, the 'medical professionals', while many are great and decent people, many dont personally care, dont really fight to understand, little more than try to fix or check off some boxes, make some assumptions, and on to next client. my point is, while there is some level of accuracy for the data, it falls suuuuper short of reality and majority of our actual experiences. and also with every one of them being so short, there is no way to fully encompass the vastness of variations we experiences.

  • @meganmccook5519
    @meganmccook5519 3 года назад +848

    The ‘i look actors in the eye while watching tv’ MAAM I READ THE SUBTITLES 😂😂😂

    • @barryscott5756
      @barryscott5756 3 года назад +75

      Omg I have subs on lol I can hear perfectly fine though. I kind of just prefer them

    • @nietoperzzszafy2996
      @nietoperzzszafy2996 3 года назад +30

      I do both. At least actors don't look like they want to eat my soul. XD

    • @jacquelinejanejane
      @jacquelinejanejane 3 года назад +1

      Omfg accurate hhaha

    • @_sixela
      @_sixela 3 года назад +14

      AND SHE LOOKED CLOSER AT THE CAMERA AND I FELT SO FREAKING UNCOMFORTABLE

    • @_sixela
      @_sixela 3 года назад +4

      @@barryscott5756 yea..same..it depends if i’m kinda in the mood for the subtitles or not

  • @stephaniesmith3544
    @stephaniesmith3544 3 года назад +694

    I think a big give away that I was autistic before getting diagnosed was the fact that these pre-screening tests are designed to take 5 minutes and I took about 45 minutes because I would overanalyse every question

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 2 года назад +32

      They should factor in the amount of time it takes to do the test in said test!

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 2 года назад +4

      I would like this, but it's at 69 likes, so...

    • @DLS06130517
      @DLS06130517 2 года назад +3

      I so relate to this.

    • @hey-ty7yu
      @hey-ty7yu 2 года назад +5

      same though, not diagnosed yet though

    • @starcycle4308
      @starcycle4308 2 года назад +6

      I keep doing that with every 5 minute test I take lol

  • @KaioruChan
    @KaioruChan 3 года назад +1145

    I had a teacher once who explained how autism doesn`t look the same for every individual in a very easy-to-understand way.
    She`d say "Imagine you have a big bucket of legos, of all kinds of different shapes, sizes and colors. Every autistic person gets at least, let`s say eight pieces of lego. They don't get to pick the pieces themselves, it's all random. No matter how those pieces are put together, not one other person is going to have the exact same combination as you. They might have some similar pieces, they might even have put them together similarly, that's true, but it's never the exact same. Assuming that just because you all have legos, you all have the exact same ones is just silly, don't you think?"
    I still think of that, to this day.

    • @hah-no.
      @hah-no. 3 года назад +56

      I love your teacher.

    • @squiddyft.insecurities3549
      @squiddyft.insecurities3549 3 года назад +4

      that analogy makes no sense

    • @KaioruChan
      @KaioruChan 3 года назад +39

      @@squiddyft.insecurities3549 It doesn`t make sense to You personally. Okay? Great?

    • @christalcavanaugh
      @christalcavanaugh 3 года назад +50

      @@squiddyft.insecurities3549 in what way does it not make sense? If the individual legos someone gets are symptoms and the construction of them represents an individual presentation of ASD in any given person, the different symptoms will always look different from someone else’s when put together even if they individually look the same (like fidgeting)

    • @squiddyft.insecurities3549
      @squiddyft.insecurities3549 3 года назад

      @@KaioruChan no it doesn’t make sense at all

  • @myworldofanimals9928
    @myworldofanimals9928 3 года назад +697

    yes Paige, I personally look at an actors eyes while watching a movie. My struggles with eye contact come from when I know someone is looking back at me. I can make eye contact with people all day long until they look back at me and then it's instant discomfort. Like me looking at them without them looking back I don't have to worry about them judging me for how long it's been since I've blinked or how intense I'm looking at them.

    • @jacencade4019
      @jacencade4019 3 года назад +27

      same. i would often get yelled at by teachers and accused of not listening or taking them seriously because i find looking someone in the eyes physically painful.

    • @anikosimon8184
      @anikosimon8184 3 года назад +21

      MyWorldOfAnimals I think what you're describing isn't "eye contact"- if you're looking at someone whilst they talk, but your eyes and their eyes don't meet, that's not eye contact. If your eyes and their eyes meet for even just like a millisecond, that's eye contact. Otherwise it's just staring at someone. No-one has a problem doing that. :) (i guess..)

    • @myworldofanimals9928
      @myworldofanimals9928 3 года назад +12

      @@anikosimon8184 well based on Paige’s reaction to the question of looking at actors eyes in movies and her being like “there are people who look at their eyes?!” Not everyone can or does so yeah. Ok then it fair to say that eye contact makes me uncomfortable unless it’s very specific scenarios or people.

    • @sarabrenna5525
      @sarabrenna5525 3 года назад +11

      Honestly same. I like people's eyes and i look at them very often, except when they are looking back at me.

    • @ZairaBandy
      @ZairaBandy 3 года назад +2

      Well for neuro typical people we just associate eye contact to “putting all my attention to what you are saying”. We just learn that from the beginning when we were babies. Our parents look at our eyes when they referred to us so we learn to look people in the eyes. I don’t think neuro typical think: “oh, that person is looking in my eyes so they are judging me now”
      Someone judging you will happened even if they are not looking into your eyes.
      We just don’t think people are judging. At least not me. That why is pretty normal for neuro typical to do it.

  • @zeekierstead9696
    @zeekierstead9696 3 года назад +587

    A tell tale sign that I’m autistic (or at least have some flavor of processing disorder) is that even though I’m pretty smart and have always had a high reading level, I didn’t quite understand a lot of these questions. Idk if that can be an autistic trait, but I’ve always had a problem with it. What makes it more frustrating is when a teacher or my mom says “well, what do you think it means?” Like, if I knew what it meant, I wouldn’t be asking?? 😭
    Can any other autistic people relate?

    • @loikira5841
      @loikira5841 3 года назад +49

      for the "what do you think it means", i think they hope an answer like "I understand that ----- but it can't be what they mean because ----". Or at least something to see why you struggle, because if it's clear to them, they can't guess, you know ?

    • @silverplim
      @silverplim 3 года назад +59

      Same it's SO bad whenever i'm taking these types of tests or even personality tests i have to google the questions to understand what it's asking. I'm always confused about these types of questions idk why 😭😭 I just feel like i can never have a solid answer

    • @zeekierstead9696
      @zeekierstead9696 3 года назад +34

      @@loikira5841 I sort of understand that. But sometimes when I read stuff, I understand the individual words, but all of them strung together don’t make any sense. Also, I feel like I might sound like an idiot for guessing incorrectly :’)
      Thank you for that though. I’ll try to step out of my comfort zone next time someone gives me that response!

    • @zeekierstead9696
      @zeekierstead9696 3 года назад +22

      @@silverplim RIGHT?? I’ve never thought of googling though. I usually just select the neutral response if one is available. If there isn’t? Big brain hurt trying to compute 👁👄👁

    • @jamrollz
      @jamrollz 3 года назад +3

      Heavily agree

  • @katelynknopp8397
    @katelynknopp8397 3 года назад +192

    i was forced to look at people’s eyes as a child (“why aren’t you looking at me?? look at me when i’m talking to you.”) and now i either look at people unrelentingly or not at all.

    • @zoezoet8122
      @zoezoet8122 2 года назад +5

      Same 😭

    • @matthewdancz9152
      @matthewdancz9152 2 года назад +7

      Have you ever just looked at a person's mouth while they talk? That's how I get through eye contact.
      Sunglasses also work well for hiding my eyes, and people are less freaked out by my eye avoidance.

    • @Gabriela-pb5ji
      @Gabriela-pb5ji 2 года назад +6

      I often have my brother's voice in my head saying: "People will like you more if you look them in the eyes". So i force myself to make eye contact to everyone i want to like me and i don't make any with people i don't care...

    • @The.Goblin.King...
      @The.Goblin.King... Год назад +5

      I either don’t look at them at all, or I stare very aggressively into their souls without blinking, like,
      “ This is what you wanted? *Right?* “

  • @kayleecoleman2821
    @kayleecoleman2821 3 года назад +153

    “Are y’all looking at my eyes now?” …. While I’m admiring her eyeliner

    • @hannahchester1757
      @hannahchester1757 3 года назад +12

      I never once looked at her eyes, I looked at her eyeliner on the same eye the entire video.

    • @stfuyoutube423
      @stfuyoutube423 2 года назад +6

      i’m doing the same thing
      gosh, it looks extremely gorgeous

    • @spiritsofwolves
      @spiritsofwolves 2 года назад +5

      Ikr i focused on the eyeliner a lot in this video

    • @rqincy
      @rqincy 9 месяцев назад +2

      THE HIGHLIGHTER IS STUNNING

  • @leonthelad3208
    @leonthelad3208 3 года назад +604

    AH I have ADHD, and it's funny to HEAVILY relate to some of the things you're saying, but also completely disagree with others, haha. Also, I love your singing, it's really nice. I know it was sped up, but I slowed it down to listen because I like hearing people sing, and you're good! It was nice to listen to :D

    • @iamqtpie2825
      @iamqtpie2825 3 года назад +7

      Same (about the singing). I slowed it down and listened to it over and over, lol.

    • @Honestly_Maya
      @Honestly_Maya 3 года назад +21

      Lol same. I have adhd, and some questions I would be like yea, and she would be like yea. Then others she would be like what no ppl do that, and I’m like I do that all time, ppl don’t do that?! 😂 😂 😆

    • @katphish30
      @katphish30 3 года назад +22

      Same, but I know there's a lot of overlap between ASD and ADHD.

    • @sephoraketo5744
      @sephoraketo5744 3 года назад +19

      Paige has ADHD too

    • @bertababy
      @bertababy 3 года назад +5

      Oh God you answered the exact same way as me for some of these. Right down to picking apart the literal meanings of the words they used 🤣🤣

  • @AusticHardOfHearingSinger
    @AusticHardOfHearingSinger 3 года назад +156

    When I see a balloon, I also worry that the balloon might pop. Strange question, indeed.

    • @minakosera1921
      @minakosera1921 3 года назад +22

      I honestly thought this was normal

    • @Twiti47
      @Twiti47 3 года назад +13

      Intrusive thoughts

    • @MsLPSFOREVER
      @MsLPSFOREVER 3 года назад +15

      Balloons popping freak me out.

    • @makedahorton2243
      @makedahorton2243 3 года назад

      @@MsLPSFOREVER same

    • @ghostgirl1940
      @ghostgirl1940 3 года назад +7

      @@Twiti47 those are not intrusive thoughts

  • @kimthompson8404
    @kimthompson8404 2 года назад +82

    this test is the one I gave my preteen to help her figure out if she was on the spectrum. Then I tested really high, then I thought, okay but EVERYONE probably tests high, and then my husband tested really low, aaaaaand that was the beginning of the journey of discovering I was autistic and the common denominator for our three autistic kids haha

    • @derrickrr5516
      @derrickrr5516 Месяц назад

      Were you ever defensive, mad, sad or negative about it? I sometimes wonder about my wife but she is quite narcissistic and would never dare take this kind of test. We have two teens, both have autism.

    • @kimthompson8404
      @kimthompson8404 Месяц назад +1

      @@derrickrr5516 no not at all. My attitude in general is pragmatic, I am always eager to just find the right answers so we can understand and address, but I know a lot of people feel differently.

  • @irmaluisacera6780
    @irmaluisacera6780 3 года назад +184

    Paige: are you looking at my eyes right now??
    Me: everytime you look at the camera, yes.

    • @ninjamissaproductions
      @ninjamissaproductions 3 года назад +2

      💖

    • @seesawseesaw
      @seesawseesaw 3 года назад +18

      I’m literally the opposite, every time there’s supposed eye contact I can’t help but look away 😭

    • @Kaztronomical
      @Kaztronomical 3 года назад +13

      Ive trained myself so much to look in peoples eyes that I do even in videos lol

    • @seesawseesaw
      @seesawseesaw 3 года назад +7

      @@Kaztronomical I used to be kinda good at looking at people (I think) but as soon as I acknowledged the fact I might be autistic it suddenly got so hard to.. mask came off and now I suck 👍

    • @hayleygrimes8804
      @hayleygrimes8804 3 года назад +1

      Same.

  • @aluminescentmushroom5910
    @aluminescentmushroom5910 3 года назад +49

    I love it when people wear really great eye liner because then it looks like i'm looking them in the eye but really i'm just ogling at their beautiful eyeliner the whole time.

  • @kajielin4354
    @kajielin4354 3 года назад +90

    I hate when these tests have ambiguous questions or do stuff like “Do you do A or like B?” and don’t tell you to tick the box if any of these apply. Then I am left wondering what I am supposed to do..

  • @garrycollins3415
    @garrycollins3415 3 года назад +78

    I think they should have had many more questions asking the opposite questions to make sure you don't instinctively answer yes forcing the answer towards autism.

  • @AusticHardOfHearingSinger
    @AusticHardOfHearingSinger 3 года назад +49

    That's like me, too. When I to be polite, it comes off as not polite. I also am not stressed about eye contact... I just don't know how much eye contact to have.

  • @Flavia1989
    @Flavia1989 3 года назад +109

    The "looking into their eyes question" always bugs me, because in every test they suggest that NTs look at each others eyes constantly. But they don't do that at all. I came use eyecontact in moments where i feel something important is being said, be it from the other person or me (and maybe randomly in between) always just a second or two - thats a way to use eyecontact that actually makes sense to me, there is intent - and since then, nobody ever told me i lack eyecontact again, ever.
    Edit: I just wondered - little Kids do look at you for long periods of time... maybe this whole topic comes from autism research and help being overwhelmingly for kids. But its still bad to force an autistic Kid to give that kind of eyecontact.

    • @Meeko4eve39
      @Meeko4eve39 3 года назад +8

      Very true. As an NT myself I can confirm that if someone looked at me, or more accurately: stared at me, constantly like that, I, too, would find that very uncomfortable because that kind of constant looking someone in the eyes is actually a threatening gesture^^
      I think, once more, the difference between NTs and autistic people is that a neurotypical person doesn't need (or only needs minimal) instruction/conscious effort for decoding appropriate length for eye contact and/or decoding what the eye area is trying to convey in the context of facial expressions. Like, the difference is literally just that these things come (almost exclusively) intuitively to neurotypical people while autistic people need to consciously set out to learn it.
      The whole "It's painful" aspect might be due to sensory processing issues (I mean... If you can see light flickering and other such minute details in your environment it stands to reason that you also see more happening when you track someone's eyes), though, and only contribute to the process of learning about eye contact being longer because that's an extra obstacle along the way.
      But anyway. Constantly looking people in the eyes is really not how NT eye contact works at all^^

    • @nietoperzzszafy2996
      @nietoperzzszafy2996 3 года назад

      True

    • @jacobewert5478
      @jacobewert5478 3 года назад +5

      The looking into the eyes question bugs me as well. As an autistic college student I have learned that cultures also vary with eye contact as being appropriate or respectful based on their countries customs. Autism would basically be in that case opposite of the other cultures norms I would think when it comes to indicators. I heard countries like Japan based on research find eye contact specifically to be potentially disrespectful within the culture. A lot of things might depend on what is the cultures particular norm when it comes to interactions with others from the same culture if not in the same place as other people with autism where that interaction would be normal. Some things that are more specific that deal with interacting with others would have this issue and less specific would not if applied between autism and people who are not autistic but from the same culture.

    • @cockycookie1
      @cockycookie1 3 года назад +4

      NT Kids are probably looking a lot more because they're still learning all the social cues (subconsciously of course). Which is why some "professionals" think forcing autistic children to copy this behaviour will make them learn instinctively as well.
      Lots of people also believe that autistic babies miss out on eye contact because unlike NT babies, they don't pay special attention to faces. That leads to them failing to copy other's behaviour. Which leads to them being bad at NT communication.

    • @Dylan-go5iv
      @Dylan-go5iv 3 года назад +4

      @@Meeko4eve39 This is true and extended eye contact can also be an unintentional flirting gesture as well. It's also one of the reasons why many people couldn't tell you someone's eye color unless they found that person particularly attractive in conversation. I've also heard that women naturally make more eye contact in regular day-to-day conversation but I'm not sure if that's true or not.

  • @jomarch1645
    @jomarch1645 3 года назад +29

    Question 32: I had a emotional calendar for a year, and I realized that most days I feel neutral or maybe a bit stressed or tired. I didn't mark any day of the year as happy, but that didn't mean I was sad, just neutral.

  • @annika6813
    @annika6813 3 года назад +87

    I was watching one of this videos like 3 days ago and I was like "so strange Paige hasnt made a video like this before" yeahhh welll hahah

    • @alliekopela
      @alliekopela 3 года назад

      BAHAHAH SAME

    • @s.a.6720
      @s.a.6720 3 года назад +5

      I think I saw one from Cloe Hayden

  • @dancewithmyshadows
    @dancewithmyshadows 3 года назад +68

    It seems like all the diagnostic tools available focus so much on the reaction or behavior of the person rather than the reason behind the behavior. For example, my daughter is sensory seeking with noises and I am sensory avoidant with noise - both of us are autistic. If the question was “do you avoid loud noises?” she would say no and I would say yes. What the question should sound like is “do loud noises cause you intense feelings (of either pleasure or pain)?”

    • @wintergray1221
      @wintergray1221 2 года назад +3

      What about scents? I have extreme loathing for strong scents like perfume and cleaning products.

    • @revamyers02
      @revamyers02 2 года назад +16

      i wish there were more autistic tests made by autistic people for autistic people -- i feel like the questions would be much easier to understand and answer for autistic people and it would probably be a lot more accurate

    • @luckysmummy5325
      @luckysmummy5325 2 года назад +1

      Genius. Agree on the rewrites!

  • @TBone4983
    @TBone4983 3 года назад +154

    I'm diagnosed with ADHD but I've often wondered if I'm autistic as well. It's hilarious to watch you think through these questions because I do the SAME THING with online assessments! You sounded exactly like me when you were talking through the party/eye contact questions.

    • @bunhead8158
      @bunhead8158 3 года назад +3

      SAME BOAT!!! the ASQ test i get 32-33 on my responses depending on different interpretations of the questions bc IDK if I’m scaling this stuff accurately 😅

    • @TheArtofFugue
      @TheArtofFugue 3 года назад +3

      Same, I believe they missed my ASD diagnosis when I was diagnosed with ADHD as a kid. We were poor, bad doctor could have been the issue. I’ve taken a few AQ tests over the past year and a half, scored 40-44 each time. Out of 50.

    • @reginanovy9142
      @reginanovy9142 2 года назад +2

      In a similar boat here! Wasn't diagnosed with ADHD until I was about 20, and that was only AFTER the other co-morbidities (depression, anxiety) were treated. I don't know about you, but I have a tendency to avoid extreme answers on these sorts of quizzes. Despite that, the ASQ test still gave me a 39. Not sure if there's just an overlap with other mental/neural diagnoses or if we could actually be on the spectrum.

  • @emilyk3825
    @emilyk3825 3 года назад +75

    Parents taking this quiz at 3am to diagnose their kids. “Yes my kid does throw tantrums!” 🤯

  • @videos4u100
    @videos4u100 3 года назад +76

    For the “i rarely feel happiness of joy” i interpreted it different as i would put major agree on that, i would say i actually get the feeling inside me of happy like once or twice a week? but i’m not saying it’s because i feel sad all the time it’s more i just“ feel” neutral/no sense of feeling until i feel that happy moment, it’s the same with other feelings like i feel actually sad or angry only like a handful of times a week.
    realising this about myself confused me more because do other people just constantly feel things throughout the day?? like actually feel the emotion? i can’t imagine living like that dhdhks

    • @ninjamissaproductions
      @ninjamissaproductions 3 года назад +6

      I had a counselor once diagnosed me as borderline personality disorder, because I mostly felt neutral. Since being diagnosed with bipolar II and taking meds (which are also for autism) I now feel more joy/happiness throughout the day. I hate feeling every emotion at once. 🤯

    • @udonge1043
      @udonge1043 3 года назад +14

      there was a study done on this called “emotions in everyday life” and people reported to feel something for at least 90% of the day, with 10% of it being nothing. people don’t constantly feel emotions, which are more intense and temporary, but they often feel like what you described, a sense of feeling, a more subtle, longer lasting “mood,” like feeling neutral. remember as long as it isn’t distressing to you or hurting you, you shouldn’t be worried about it. how people experience emotions varies widely. you should probably only be concerned when its on one of the far ends of the spectrum of emotion (feeling nothing or feeling way to much and not being able to manage it)

    • @videos4u100
      @videos4u100 3 года назад +1

      @@ninjamissaproductions oh interesting! i did look into BPD for myself but i don’t feel that i identify with the common traits enough to seek an assessment,, i didn’t know that BPD meds could be used for autism too tho!?

    • @videos4u100
      @videos4u100 3 года назад +2

      @@udonge1043 thank you that is helpful to know! i would say the emotion i do feel is usually pretty extreme, even the happy feeling makes me overwhelmed to the point where i try and avoid my favourite interests if i’m not in the right frame of mind to handle that ‘high’ if that makes sense? but i’ve just had an assessment for adhd which to me would explain the emotional regulation issues i get more than my autism does

    • @Dylan-go5iv
      @Dylan-go5iv 3 года назад

      I'd say I feel genuine joy as well as other emotions on a daily basis. I consider it to be a pretty dull day if I don't experience some type of actual joy at least once.
      I wouldn't say I get incredibly excited every single day or anything but it's definitely enough emotion to shift my state of mind and make me feel distinctly different.

  • @runrockwater
    @runrockwater 3 года назад +19

    Never thought about if I look at ppl's eyes when watching a movie. I'm mostly paying attention to the plot. Paige's eyes are hard to miss though, u see them without trying

  • @jahbrianawilliams7326
    @jahbrianawilliams7326 3 года назад +32

    Idk if I looked into actors’ eyes in movies when I was younger, but I know that I actively do it now because for me, it helps me learn facial expressions. Like, what emotion are they showing, why are they looking like that and what reaction will the other actor make in response to that expression. And a lot the times the actor is expressing themselves verbally so I like to match the tone to the expression. Most likely I’m stimming when I do this because it’s kind of uncomfortable, but at the same time the actors aren’t directly staring back at me so it’s not that bad. Idk if it’s considered “normal” or not.

  • @TVampire
    @TVampire 3 года назад +19

    I’ve never thought of getting bamboo dishes. That sounds like a great idea!

  • @princevalium25
    @princevalium25 3 года назад +49

    At 14:54 when they asked about visualization, that one spoke to me because all through middle and high school I could not follow a book to save my life. My aunt, who is a 5th-grade teacher, once asked me "Don't you get a movie in your head?" and I was like "Am I supposed to?". I never understood why people enjoyed reading because to me it was just reading words that went into my mental garbage bin 5 minutes after I read them. I would forget entire events and sub-plots in books because it wouldn't stick in my head what I had just read

    • @Dylan-go5iv
      @Dylan-go5iv 3 года назад +6

      This is how I feel most of the time as well. If I'm really invested in something then I can visualize it but I've never been able to actually read more than a few chapters of a book and maintain interest.

    • @toni5543
      @toni5543 2 года назад

      I also identify hard.

    • @mellowyellow5865
      @mellowyellow5865 2 года назад +3

      I write and when I do it I can feel the emotions and the sounds, see the lights and feel the cold. But I can’t for the life of me picture it. I have no idea what my characters look like, I never visualize them. So I never write and describe them. I have to force myself to do it. But I feel like I theoretically know what they look like, I just don’t know what they look like.

    • @JemimaDoesASMR
      @JemimaDoesASMR 2 года назад +3

      There's a word for that btw, "aphantasia" which is the inability to visualise

  • @khalyasongofnerdsandwriter5473
    @khalyasongofnerdsandwriter5473 3 года назад +36

    My whole life I’ve been told I am a “normal person”, with weird attributes and a ton of mental disorders and disabilities... but taking these quizzes and scoring as autistic on every one of them... I am now questioning my entire existence on this Earth... I don’t even know what to say...
    This was fun, though, so thank you for doing this and thank you for linking the quizzes. It’s now opened up many questions for me, but, if there is an answer to why I am how I am; glad to know it. Oh gosh so many questions now.

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 2 года назад +2

      False positive.

    • @Anonymous-df8it
      @Anonymous-df8it 2 года назад +1

      @Heather Petersen No. The bad tests are giving her a false positive, d*mb@$$

  • @spicysabsroll9022
    @spicysabsroll9022 3 года назад +20

    ON MY OWN IS ONE OF MY FAVORITE VOCAL STIMS couldn't help but sing along 💚

    • @laughatdarkness1286
      @laughatdarkness1286 3 года назад +4

      SAMMEE!! Plus les mis is a special interest of mine ive read the book at least fifteen times. Eponine has always been my favorite!

    • @Necessity4fun
      @Necessity4fun Год назад

      That's what it was! I just spent 5 mins trying to remember, I think it was in Glee for a bit, damn the nostalgia! Paige's voice is pretty too, I was vibing

  • @sweettea018
    @sweettea018 3 года назад +53

    About question 10: that's not how everyone is, haha (although it would be really cool if it were). The society "norm" is to treat coworkers, figures of authority or anyone you meet in a formal environment with a lot more distance and formality than you would a friend at a party.

    • @cockycookie1
      @cockycookie1 3 года назад +1

      How does one stay employed without picking up on that??

    • @bean2046
      @bean2046 2 года назад +1

      @@cockycookie1 isn't only one third of autistics regularly employed?

    • @Lena-xy8id
      @Lena-xy8id 2 года назад

      @@cockycookie1 it's tough (:

  • @mayo.naiyse967
    @mayo.naiyse967 3 года назад +9

    I’m not looking at your eyes, I’m looking at your eyeliner! I love the way it looks when you look at the camera and back down again and up and then down 😂😂😂

  • @isabellajohnson956
    @isabellajohnson956 3 года назад +35

    Your eyes and personality are amazing!

  • @no_peace
    @no_peace 3 года назад +10

    "do you talk to blah blah when you're at a party?"
    I like how they can't imagine someone just not ever going to a party

  • @jakehart60
    @jakehart60 3 года назад +30

    Hey just wondering if you could make a video on the topic of dating? 1.Your personal experiences with it. 2. Things to keep in mind when dating someone on the spectrum.

    • @Lena-xy8id
      @Lena-xy8id 2 года назад +2

      Especially about safety

  • @realpaigelayle
    @realpaigelayle  3 года назад +17

    thank you again Care/of for sponsoring this video, you're so so helpful! find out what supplements Care/of recommends for you here- bit.ly/3zTDBdV

    • @leoneedfan123
      @leoneedfan123 3 года назад +1

      congrats!!!

    • @lewindvargas2299
      @lewindvargas2299 3 года назад +1

      @paige layle i glad you learned from that because god bless you as always and i admire you for doing this because you're #1 understandable than stupid mark rober right now but you're the best and i respect you and love you to death for the will of the lord anytime and anywhere and anything haha

  • @gabbi9415
    @gabbi9415 3 года назад +37

    the problem with these tests is that I, as an autistic person, take them too literally lmao

    • @spiritsofwolves
      @spiritsofwolves 2 года назад +4

      I get confused easily at the questions even though i know what they mean like the raining cats and dogs question about uhh metaphors i understand those ones probably because of tv so i say im fine with them but thats because i cant think of any metaphors i didnt know.... She's right though doesnt everyone get confused about metaphors they dont know? Sorry if this was confusing btw im working on my grammar and my first explanation is always horrible since its just the rough draft of my thoughts all chaotically put in a paragraph

  • @aya_x9x
    @aya_x9x 3 года назад +15

    ive always pondered what it would be like if a collective of varying autistic peoples built a like 250+ question one of these. there are sooooooo many totally non-sensical things in alot of these. i also find that for me, difficulty in answering the questions accurately enough, well it takes alot of time, because i never know how to answer most things and i freeze up trying to figure out most 'accurate' response lol. that all on its own is something i havent really seen pop up as a question on any of these silly quizes.

  • @emeidocathail7808
    @emeidocathail7808 3 года назад +16

    I got 37 on the AQ test back in March and was officially diagnosed 2 weeks ago .. at age 48 .. it’s a brave new world.

    • @thegracklepeck
      @thegracklepeck 2 года назад +1

      I need to get tested. I've taken the AQ test a couple times over the past 2 years and always I'm in the mid to high 30's.

  • @FlyToTheRain
    @FlyToTheRain 3 года назад +53

    "bananas... you're on thin ice" idk why that made me laugh lol

    • @glennchugg6015
      @glennchugg6015 3 года назад +2

      Because it's un expected and VERY funny..

  • @yoavravid7893
    @yoavravid7893 3 года назад +10

    Others have told me questions are complete garbage.
    Others rarely tell me anything, that doesn't mean what they don't tell isn't true, just that people don't tell me that, which isn't the point of the question.

  • @sheradenart7907
    @sheradenart7907 7 месяцев назад +2

    beset by sadness means that you are overcome with it.

  • @nicolemarcak9021
    @nicolemarcak9021 3 года назад +11

    The balloon question is an oddly specific. I actually cant blow up balloons anymore, when I was younger I had no problem then got some reason beginning of high school I got this growing fear they would pop in my face, and one day I still tried while setting up for a baby shower and it did indeed pop in my face. I literally haven't blown up a balloon since then. If I try, my heart actually races.

  • @tmanokc
    @tmanokc 3 года назад +34

    Question #10 is a bit interesting here, ‘cause Paige has established that she’s self-employed (as a lash technician, along with her social media activity), so I’m unsure whether that question would apply wording-wise and given what she’s disclosed publicly, unless she employs other people for her lash tech business. If you’re self-employed, whether you would talk to friends and co-workers in the same manner depends on whether you employ other people.

    • @MorgenPeschke
      @MorgenPeschke 3 года назад +11

      It could also be referring to our tendency to not "get" the social nuances of how situation dependent context influences allistic expectations.
      They say, "bring your whole self to work," but I've learned the hard way that there are some wildly different rules for how I'm expected to talk at work vs at home or with friends - even in hyper casual Silicone Valley startups.

    • @tmanokc
      @tmanokc 3 года назад +1

      @@MorgenPeschke That I didn’t think about. I sometimes treat certain phrases and sentences in their literal context, and focused on available information without realizing that it could apply generally to one’s understanding of differences in social nuances.

  • @georgia1986
    @georgia1986 3 года назад +5

    7:19 your stimming was so cute omg the happiness

  • @Lauren-ks4ep
    @Lauren-ks4ep 3 года назад +11

    So this balloon question is so funny to me… when I was 7 my mom had a birthday for me and wanted to do a balloon game where we all got balloons tied to our legs and tried to stomp on each other’s to make them pop. I LOST it. I went to my room and spent my birthday by myself while my friends played

    • @spiritsofwolves
      @spiritsofwolves 2 года назад +1

      How is that fun..? its so loud and surprising like i can understand bubble wrap now _THAT'S_ FUN! but balloons?? what if the popped remains hits my eye??? i've actually had a balloon pop infront of my face while i was blowing it up it scared me at first and my ears were ringing it also smacked my face so it did hurt a bit just a bit though i do have to admit it wasnt so scary afterwards i actually found it quite funny even though my ears continued to ring for about 2 minutes (idk cant really remember)

    • @SaerBear5
      @SaerBear5 Год назад +1

      I have the same memory from I think my 5th birthday party. Fuck that game.

  • @adymlv
    @adymlv 3 года назад +5

    I was SO confused, bc I was sure that I saw this a couple of days ago, until I realised that it was Chloe Hayden who did a similar video. I think it's great that autistic creators talk about self-diagnosis after research is valid, how health care is inaccessible and how a formal diagnosis isn't possible for everyone. Keep doing what you are doing! :)

  • @angelysesantiago6561
    @angelysesantiago6561 3 года назад +296

    My problem with tests like these, they rely heavily on autistic stereotypes, not only that but white male autistic stereotypes.

    • @Dylan-go5iv
      @Dylan-go5iv 3 года назад +14

      And which questions here specifically had anything to do with being white exactly? 🤔

    • @angelysesantiago6561
      @angelysesantiago6561 3 года назад +50

      @@Dylan-go5iv I’m assumed you don’t know what people of color aren’t diagnosed as much as white people are. It’s the same as females not getting diagnosed as much a males are. Unless you do know that and are just getting defensive for some reason.🤨

    • @tink6225
      @tink6225 2 года назад +5

      @@Dylan-go5iv I assume you're a white male

    • @Dylan-go5iv
      @Dylan-go5iv 2 года назад +39

      @@angelysesantiago6561 I'm not defensive about it at all, it was a genuine question. People of color being underdiagnosed is true and very unfortunate. Can you provide any documentation or studies to suggest that people of color don't present autism in the same way as white people though?
      I'd argue they're underdiagnosed, not because they're completely different, but because they're *treated* different in an unfair way.
      So no, I don't understand how race has anything to do with actual traits of autism. I've only seen things to suggest that it's more often ignored or disregarded due to racism. I'm open to learning more about it if you have any info to provide and prove me wrong, sincerely.

    • @smvnt3803
      @smvnt3803 2 года назад +11

      ​@@angelysesantiago6561 Genuine question, neurotypical person here. How'd a person of colour have a different set of symptoms just because of their ethnicity? Can understand that it could be different for different genders, but ethnicity shouldn't make much difference I suppose.

  • @oddbobproductions781
    @oddbobproductions781 3 года назад +5

    Similarly to you, Paige, for a lot of the questions like being invited to parties or--for example, "do you prefer going to a movie theater or a library," I would have to say, it depends, you know? And I love the idea of meeting new people, I ask my parents to bring over guests all the time. But when they actually show up, that's when I panic and don't know how to start a conversation with them and I end up disappointed when they leave because I didn't get a chance to talk to them as I wanted to. I enjoy talking and having people listen to what I say.

  • @amandab2993
    @amandab2993 3 года назад +5

    I love your content! I think part of the reason they ask so many behavioral questions and questions implying being unhappy because I think they intend people who suspect they have autism but have not been diagnosed. Without a diagnosis to bring to their family, friends and employers for making room for accomodations would probably cause distress.

  • @peanutbutter4949
    @peanutbutter4949 3 года назад +6

    I literally just took this same test the other day and scored a 40. And watching you break some of these questions down is super relatable and now I'm really questioning if I'm on the spectrum now

  • @adalai_domaruk
    @adalai_domaruk 3 года назад +2

    The eyes of somebody is normally what someone looks at when a person is talking.

  • @johnfist6220
    @johnfist6220 3 года назад +5

    When I see a balloon I worry that I too could simply float off the face of the Earth.

  • @JMSxoxo
    @JMSxoxo 3 года назад +42

    Unrelated: I think Paige would look great as a redhead

    • @tokyobateman6610
      @tokyobateman6610 3 года назад +5

      Oh 1000 percent

    • @dsrtsnw
      @dsrtsnw 3 года назад +2

      she can't help but look gorgeous, it's the face. (:

    • @stfuyoutube423
      @stfuyoutube423 2 года назад +1

      i think she’d look great as a combination of how she looks in this video and how she looks in her third video

  • @jacencade4019
    @jacencade4019 3 года назад +9

    yes paige we are all looking at your eyes. they are gorgeous.

    • @stfuyoutube423
      @stfuyoutube423 2 года назад +1

      the eyeliner really increases the gorgeousness amounts by 9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999%

  • @ahhh4117
    @ahhh4117 2 года назад +5

    I will say that having all of my friends take the quiz at the same time as me and hearing what they had to say about the questions opened my eyes to the idea that "wow, that isn't a universal experience?" and that was important in realizing I was on the spectrum

  • @ellalia354
    @ellalia354 3 года назад +6

    If you're genuinely wondering, I definitely look at the eyes of actors in films x

  • @theedgeofoblivious
    @theedgeofoblivious 3 года назад +3

    Beset is like being overwhelmed.

    • @hollyw5328
      @hollyw5328 3 года назад +1

      'Beset' is used when something causes a person problems or difficulty (Merriam Webster). Being beset by something can include being overwhelmed, but being overwhelmed isn't essential. The statement "I am often beset by feelings of sadness" is asking whether you are often sad (cause of sadness unspecified). The purpose of the question is about whether or not you are depressed.

  • @kboyd268
    @kboyd268 3 года назад +23

    I feel like age is such a significant factor for these questions.

  • @CamdenBloke
    @CamdenBloke 3 года назад +1

    I'm looking at your eyes *because* the ring light is reflected in them and that's facinating.

  • @fuqiu1591
    @fuqiu1591 3 года назад +4

    I have done so many of these! Literally tested positive on every single one, paid or not paid i scored «high» or «severe» on all of them

  • @AmmyTheGhost
    @AmmyTheGhost 3 года назад +1

    I also rarely ever experience anger, I guess the closest emotion is ill get anxiety from what would make a typical angry

  • @JakeGuitarMusic
    @JakeGuitarMusic 3 года назад +4

    You’re bangs look georgeous!!

  • @brendanhoffmann8402
    @brendanhoffmann8402 3 года назад +5

    I've been watching videos on RUclips for about a month now from the perspective of people with autism after suspecting that I'm autistic for a while. I took the autism quotient test on the first day and got a 41 out of 50. I talked to my doctor about it and am seeing a psychologist next week. I am actually already on the disability pension for not being able to function psychologically in the world (diagnosed with OCD). I have been talking to my social worker about this and have found her to be a good sounding board for me to verbalise what I've come to realise. I'm trying not to get too wrapped up in the videos here because I don't want to come across as obsessive to my diagnosticians. (I'm 40 years old)

  • @bulgogi411
    @bulgogi411 3 года назад +3

    For the balloon thing I’d say that people are generally scared when it pops but they won’t be scared about the possibility of it popping any time

  • @ninjamissaproductions
    @ninjamissaproductions 3 года назад +1

    I love how you explain everything at the end. It's better to talk to someone and explain the answers.

  • @dylanfooler
    @dylanfooler 3 года назад +4

    I just realized with a lot of the "What people really mean ect." Questions that I tend to mimic how allistic people interact by saying that I Want to say to by myself amd then re-word it to be less "rude" bc I know my first thoughts always tend to be "rude" :/ Even with my partner but that's more bc of RSD (they have adhd) amd I don't want to upset that

  • @lunadennett1419
    @lunadennett1419 3 года назад +1

    Paige your eyeliner is ADORABLE :O

  • @PhoebeJones
    @PhoebeJones 3 года назад +5

    This is super interesting as many people may use these tests as initial indicators for themselves as whether they may have autism! :)

  • @katieblazer1555
    @katieblazer1555 3 года назад +1

    when the question came up about the eyes... i couldnt stop staring at your eyes- idk why i just... could stop. ive never looked at the persons eyes in a video but now i cant look away-

  • @MissMarvel_
    @MissMarvel_ 3 года назад +3

    I'm not neurotypical, but I am allistic. I don't worry that a balloon is going to pop; however, if I know it's going to pop (or I have to pop it myself) I hate it. A lot.
    Also, yes, I watch eyes in movies to read their expression, and I am switching between your eyes and the test throughout the video.

  • @screenfiendnz
    @screenfiendnz 3 месяца назад +2

    I feel there should be an online autism test that has like 1000 super specific questions

  • @kilian8250
    @kilian8250 3 года назад +11

    I’m autistic, but I don’t understand this ”fascination” with dates. In what way? Why?

    • @molly702
      @molly702 3 года назад +3

      Same i can’t remember any numbers or dates at all and I don’t understand why they would be interesting cause it’s boring to me lol

    • @sarabrenna5525
      @sarabrenna5525 3 года назад +1

      I am autistic and dyscalculic so everything related to numbers gets a no from me.

    • @molly702
      @molly702 3 года назад

      @@sarabrenna5525 Yees! Math is literally hell on earth for me

    • @danika6850
      @danika6850 2 года назад

      Autism is often intertwined with OCD, and having a really good picture memory so that’s why it applies for me. But I find a lot of neurodiverse people are skilled at math-which I am not.

  • @kallmej8906
    @kallmej8906 3 года назад +1

    Non ASD related but... I had to 0.5x speed the singing part. You have talent, sis.

  • @elphix9465
    @elphix9465 3 года назад +3

    You make my Friday evenings much better!! Thank you 🙏

  • @ladylemon202
    @ladylemon202 3 года назад +2

    “Are you guys looking at my eyes?”
    I’m looking at your eyeliner😂 idk if that counts but it’s really pretty

  • @gaines_gal
    @gaines_gal 3 года назад +14

    As a neurotypical I do not worry about balloons popping

    • @UncleSpenkor
      @UncleSpenkor 3 года назад +2

      one time a ballon i was holding popped and i started crying

    • @Adifferentusername
      @Adifferentusername 3 года назад +1

      As someone in the process of a diagnose, i don’t either

    • @molly702
      @molly702 3 года назад +5

      As an autistic person I never think about that unless someone is making an effort to pop it.

    • @geanneoliveira5006
      @geanneoliveira5006 3 года назад +1

      I've always had a fear of balloons popping and I thought everybody experienced this, and that it just wasn't as strong for others than it is for me, guess I was wrong

    • @gaines_gal
      @gaines_gal 5 месяцев назад

      Update* I am not neurotypical 😂 I got diagnosed as AuDHD about 1 year ago. Joke was on me. Makes sense though.

  • @samirah4423
    @samirah4423 2 года назад +1

    i did the SAME THING when i saw the word "beset"! i paused the video, googled it, then played the video, and saw you say you don't know what it means either

  • @cold.raviolis
    @cold.raviolis 3 года назад +4

    My doctor has tried to diagnose me for months now, she still doesn't know if I have autism or not and now my last appointment was cancelled, because she doesn't work at the facility anymore. Guess I'll never know then

  • @TurboBass
    @TurboBass Год назад +2

    "Are y'all looking at MY eyes right now??"
    You have big make up wings on your eyes, they're large and you look directly into the camera and widen them, you can see the entire ring light in your pupils.
    We are all looking into your eyes.

  • @bluemoongirl241
    @bluemoongirl241 3 года назад +3

    Oh and on tv I often look at the actors eyes. I find eyes very intriguing. They wey they move, the colour, ... But I would want to look at someones eyes as some kind of observation than really making eyecontact because than I usually look away. xp

  • @maddieellis5659
    @maddieellis5659 3 года назад +2

    7:53 haha i was looking at yours eyes right then… not because “eye contact” but because the color of yours are particularly mesmerizing. like, it’s a really pretty icy/electric blue. :)

  • @cjjuszczak
    @cjjuszczak 11 месяцев назад +3

    anyone else bothered by the order of the "next" and "back" buttons o.O
    NEXT has the arrow forwards to progress pointing to the right, yet BACK is in ... FRONT of the NEXT button?? and why doesn't he BACK button have an arrow signifying going back?? How does it make sense to press the button that's in FRONT and to the right to go ... BACKWARDS??
    For English Western readers who read LEFT-->RIGHT, time is the same direction I.E. past is the LEFT and future is to the RIGHT, it should have the BACK button on the left, and the NEXT button on the RIGHT :)

  • @tiegrsidesignsandstudio4794
    @tiegrsidesignsandstudio4794 7 месяцев назад

    I have been struggling a lot this past week, dealing with a lot of stress and...painful things. I've had multiple meltdowns, which are unusual for me.
    I put this on for background sound while I was working tonight...and I just want to thank you for making my night a little brighter with your song. I love Les Mis and often sing 'On My Own' to myself. Hearing you sing it made me smile for the first time in several days...and I just wanted to thank you for that.

  • @tyreesetjjoyner1995
    @tyreesetjjoyner1995 3 года назад +3

    Good video. Continue on your road on getting the giant gold play button. I hope I’ll see your silver play button. Hopefully, Chris ULMER of SBSK would love to see you

  • @madeline9538
    @madeline9538 3 года назад +1

    When plans change.... I can’t recover from that

  • @christinemcphee5594
    @christinemcphee5594 3 года назад +3

    I feel like the experiencing happy and joy question would be a alexithymia thing and not being able to process what your feeling as happiness or joy which I deff struggle with. But also big time with the whole being forced to repress the parts of myself from mt interests and stims that provide me with happiness and joy, which I'm now relearning since I was forced to repress my autism in the home and outside of it.

  • @Nora.Frank.
    @Nora.Frank. 3 года назад +2

    Wow. I've just remembered that I was a heel walker too :') just over a year since diagnosis and I'm still realising/remembering things, what feels like every day.

  • @gellichan09
    @gellichan09 3 года назад +3

    I did lots of research on ASD and did so many of these and I always got results that I have it. I tried tests for other mental disorders too but failed those. When I came to my GP recently, I told her I may have autism and the first thing she told me was I don't look autistic. Whatever the heck that means. Told her I did these quizzes and I know it wasn't the most accurate but i got results that said I may have ASD. She brushed it off and then later on asked me if I did one for ADHD. I said yeah but it always said I don't have ADHD and then she was like oh okay maybe it's something else. 🥴 she was so fast on denying my suspicions and own research about autism, but for something else, it suddenly matters I guess

  • @catlinboy
    @catlinboy 2 года назад +1

    'I dancing and did all my toe walking there, so everywhere else I did heel walking, because if I walked on my whole foot it would make it uneven.'
    THIS MAKES SO MUCH SENSE. Like as an adult I can see that if a kid explained this to you, you'd sigh and roll your eyes and have to be like, that's not how it works. But it is faultless logic and there is no real reason why that isn't how it works. Except long term foot pain, which you don't feel in childhood!
    Regardless, I'm very glad I mostly grew out of my need to unturn every 360 turn I made, my version of being uneven, because it was just an added stress to my day, to make sure you don't inadvertently turn around.

  • @booboofairy8014
    @booboofairy8014 3 года назад +4

    the only reason I looked at Paige's eyes is because I was looking at her cool makeup xD

    • @stfuyoutube423
      @stfuyoutube423 2 года назад +1

      it’s safe to say i have a crush on her

  • @rkivelover
    @rkivelover 3 года назад +2

    The thing about the special object is SO true. I used to have this little pig figurine that I got on New Years when I was like 9 or 10 and I loved it so much and I kept it in my pocket at all times and I was planning to bring it to my entrance exams (along with this pebble-sized wooden heart I also had) and then I lost both of them and freaked out and my sister offered me her pig but it wasn’t the same so I got really stressed but it’s okay cos I got a scholarship :)

  • @arcadiaadair258
    @arcadiaadair258 3 года назад +10

    One of my close friends, somewhere along the line they got the idea that i was autistic (im adhd and def told them but i think they got confused) it had me second guessing myself and i took a bunch of quizzes hah, but even if they arent the mooost reliable i scored low on all of them and i dont think i need to pursue a diagnosis. But every now and then im just like... Should i talk to a professional?? My friend was sooo sure i was autistic and weve known each other for some time. (For what its worth they are also adhd)

    • @emilypanda5959
      @emilypanda5959 3 года назад +4

      I do think ADHD can mask autistic traits, but there's also some overlap so they might just be picking up on your ADHD. I'm both and definitely show more ADHD traits with some things and I feel this masks the autism. (Like I can be quite impulsive and sensory seeking, meaning I don't panic as much at plan changes, I'm not as sensitive to overstimulation... etc)

    • @jenblack98
      @jenblack98 3 года назад +4

      It's cos ADHD and autism have a lot in common. Unless you have some of the symptoms that don't overlap I wouldn't bother getting professional involvement because it likely won't lead to anything. I have ADHD (The inattentive type formally called ADD) and I have most of the 'crossover' symptoms but I'm not autistic because I don't have any of the symptoms that don't cross over. Most of these quizzes are BS.

  • @vanillaghosttt
    @vanillaghosttt 10 месяцев назад +1

    your eyeliner its FIRE!!!!

  • @sofetchxx
    @sofetchxx 3 года назад +3

    50 questions, gives me a headache just thinking about it.

  • @pukk6094
    @pukk6094 3 года назад +1

    I don’t think most people are scared a balloon might pop but I’ve also never thought about it

  • @godismetons
    @godismetons 3 года назад +16

    Wait, you can sing and read at the same time!? It's this a thing people can do!? I'm so jealous T,T

  • @keyc.1109
    @keyc.1109 Год назад +1

    The whole stress idea when looking at eyes throws me off because eyes just give me like the creeps.

  • @MrsMrsBecky
    @MrsMrsBecky 3 года назад +4

    My daughter got declined to be checked for autism yesterday x) They saw signs of adhd at the 1 hour we were there, but not the autism. But I know she has it x))))))) I now I have to find out what to do.... (I live in Sweden)

  • @christalcavanaugh
    @christalcavanaugh 3 года назад +1

    The sports part hit home. As a kid I always preferred swimming or horseback riding lessons as well as gymnastics, ice skating, and dance over team sports like basketball, t-ball, or even soccer which I did twice. I always felt like I was letting everyone else down even if I wasn’t actually worse than them. I didn’t compete in any of my solo sports so it was just fun and I didn’t have to communicate with anyone else while doing it really