▲ | unclad5968 a day ago | |
I can't speak for everyone, but for myself the scenarios in this simulator basically don't affect my life at all. Annoying radio ad, "That's annoying". People team requests my participation at some event, "No thanks". Don't want to go to work, "oh well". If someone suggested we get coffee I'd be excited. I've never even considered not taking meds I've been prescribed. Other things seem normal to me. I put on ANC headphones at my office job all the time. While going through the simulator, I was shocked with the response to some choices and situations. I was not aware that these things were so disruptive to some people. | ||
▲ | kzrdude a day ago | parent | next [-] | |
I don't consider myself autistic, but a lot of the situations in the game are familiar. That's an extreme version of me on a bad day. On a good day (enough food, sleep, etc) I can handle it, sometimes explicitly thinking about it, sometimes no action required. | ||
▲ | ParetoOptimal a day ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> While going through the simulator, I was shocked with the response to some choices and situations. I was not aware that these things were so disruptive to some people. Well, I guess the simulator did a good job spreading awareness that it is like that for some? I have ADHD and while I'm medicated I cannot fathom some of the struggles or decisions that unmedicated me makes... like I struggle to have empathy for unmedicated me. I imagine without such deep personal experience it would be much harder or impossible to understand or empathize. |