Experience 60 Seconds Of How It Feels To Live With Autism.

By Michael Avery in Health and Fitness On 3rd December 2015
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#1

We've all heard the definition and most of us have even seen it before, be it from a classmate from long ago or a close family member from today, but we can't possibly experience it. With experience comes understanding, so being unable to understand what an autistic person goes through can be quite rough on anyone close to them. That needs to change.

#2 Certain things can drive you up a wall.

Like the drip, drip, drip of a leaky faucet.

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#3 Or deafening, nonstop police sirens outside the window that just. won't. quit.

That's why a video made by the U.K.-based National Autistic Society really struck a chord.

For the first time, we are able to get a glimpse into the world as it's experienced by many who have autism or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) a developmental condition that can hinder a person's social, emotional, or communication skills.

#4 A lot of these folks experience sensory sensitivity, which makes it hard to process sensory information like sounds, sights, or tastes.

For someone who has ASD, a sound (like those obnoxious police sirens mentioned earlier) can be magnified and distorted. Or a fabric used for everyday clothing might feel very uncomfortable to the touch.

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#5 To people without sensory sensitivity, those police sirens may just be annoying. But for someone with autism, hearing them could be downright painful.

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#6 Autism is more than just sensory sensitivity, though.

In case you don't know too much about ASD, here are some basic facts:

You can't "see" it. "There's often nothing about how people with [ASD] look that sets them apart from other people," according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

It's more common than you might think. The CDC estimates that about 1 in 68 children have been identified with autism.

ASD isn't a one-size-fits-all label. "Every person with autism is different," according to a video by the National Autistic Society. "That's what makes it so difficult to understand."

And the verdict's still out on precisely what causes autism. No one knows for sure, but research has led doctors to believe there are likely multiple factors environmental, biological, and genetic that can increase the chances of a person having ASD. (And, just FYI, getting vaccines isn't one of them.)

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#7 Watching a one-minute video on sensory sensitivity certainly doesn't mean you know what having autism feels like...

...especially because having ASD can mean many different things to different people.

But watching the PSA below can really spark empathy for those who experience the world a bit differently than many of us.