
seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from Denmark
seen from Germany

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Türkiye

seen from China
seen from United States
Flag of Imperial Japan itso the USSR
from /r/vexillology Top comment: Based on the saying, "The nail that sticks out gets hammered down." 98% sure that that wasn't an actual saying, or at least not the original one, but it made for a good symbol, I think.
Itso: If Shigaraki looks at me Iāll either cry or cry. One of the two.
Acronyms
As we get a lot of questions that follow similar themes, weāve created a list of acronyms to use when tagging posts. The new (and a couple old) acronyms are as follows:
AIA - am I autistic
IIAAT- is it an autism thing
ITAAT- is this an autism thing
ITAMD - is that a meltdown
ITASD - is that a shutdown
ITSO - is that sensory overload
ITASPIN - is that a SpIn (special interest)
ITASTIM - is that a stim
For a full list of acronyms used on this blog, please check out our acronym page.Ā
-Sabrina
Ghoul Itso livin the slavic vtm dream.. it gets better probably
Itso (from Christo) - 14th gen thin-blooded
First vtm character i ever played, tho only briefly š
Managed to live as 3's ghoul for a few years, got into an unreasonable amount of trouble around him & his crowd before @ some point 3 decided to turn him.. did it mostly just to see what'd happen, ngl he was pretty bored at the time
Rn he's just tryina chill out and find a cool spot to hang as far away from the vamps as possible
iiaat to need more volume depending on the day? like yesterday i only needed the volume (of a same game ost) at like 10 but today i need it all the way up. is it like underload maybe ?
Iām not sure how common this is, but I know itās a thing I experience (also varying by time of day). Ā In my case itās usually the other way around - myĀ ānormal volumeā for music or TV feels Too Loud at night or when Iāve had a particularly stressful day. Ā I interpret mine as sensory overload, so yours could easily be underload.
Followers, does anyone else experience this?
-Liz
Iām the same anon. Usually means Iāll have a panic attack or meltdown soon.
-Wren
I experience varying volume needs with both underload and overload. Like, I have my standard volume and I sometimes need a much higher volume and other times I need a much lower volume.Ā
-Sabrina
My neutral expression is to furrow my brows and frown a bit, sometimes I don't even realize I'm doing it. Also, no matter my emotion, when there's someone in the room I smile. Are these autism things? // As a child I would cry if water was splashed on me, even a drop, even though I loved swimming. Would this count as sensory issues? // Iiaat to not know why you're crying? I get frustrated with myself for crying bc I feel like there's no reason to // -herobrine asks
Not being aware of your expression could be an autism thing but I also think itās just a people thing because everyone I know (autistic or not) has a neutral orĀ ārestingā face that theyāre normally not aware of. Although, depending on the situation, it could also be related to mismatched facial expressions/emotions which is an autism thing (smiling when sad or frowning when happy for example)
The smiling at people in the room no matter your emotion could be an internal rule youāve come up with for how to socialize. In which case, it would be an autism thing.
Crying if water splashes on you could be a sensory thing if you donāt like some sensory aspect of water and thatās why you cried. It could also, again, be internal rules about not liking water on you. For example, Iāve always loved water. But I have an internal rule about it not getting on my face if Iām anywhere but the shower and get upset if my face gets wet say, at the pool. Both of these reasons would be autism things.
Not knowing why youāre crying could be due to alexithymia, which many autistic people experience. So, yes it would be an autism thing.
-Mads