I (M, 46, ASD1) have been feeling very overstimulated today. Everything has me on edge and everything is too much (this isn’t the first time I have felt this). I want to say I have a headache and call it a day, but that isn’t it this is that different thing. I mean if I am honest it’s going to cause me to have a headache but that isn’t how it started. This is that supernova inside that feels like the edge of something. That feeling of “if you know what’s good for you” but you just can’t say it out loud.

I am late diagnosis and I really never got support or words for this. I was hoping someone here could help me. Is there something I can do? Is there a name for this? Is it appropriate to warn people about this? I am really irritable, is it healthy for me to be masking this as hard as I am and just screaming about it later when I can? I know how I have dealt with all of this all of these years and frankly it has lead to a lot of other mental health problems. So really any words of wisdom would be welcome.

  • jarfil@beehaw.org
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    10 months ago

    A possible alternative, or addition, to noise cancelling, is playing some pink noise. It also helps to mask some tinnitus.

    • Mara He/Him/Mara@beehaw.orgOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      10 months ago

      So I have always had tinnitus so this sounds awesome, but what is pink noise, like white noise and where would I find something like that?

      Also Thanks so much for offering help. I really do appreciate it. It means a lot to me. I will look it up on the internet but I was wondering if you had any interesting resources.

      • jarfil@beehaw.org
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        6
        ·
        10 months ago

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pink_noise

        In the “See also” section, you can find a list of different noise types.

        White noise is a random signal evenly distributed over all frequencies, but since human hearing is more logarithmic, it tends to have too many high frequency notes.

        Pink noise has a logarithmic distribution with the same amount of noise per octave, which aligns better with human perception of sound.

        Ideally, you’d want a noise distribution adapted to your particular hearing curve, but it isn’t easy to get one of those (even if you go for a test, like for hearing aids, they like to keep the data “secret” to lock you in).

        where would I find something like that

        YouTube has some “videos” with stuff like “10 hours of Pink noise”. Yes, those people get paid for publishing noise… they’re also among the most popular “songs” on Spotify.

        Alternatively, you can pick up Audacity and generate the noise yourself (it has plenty of types to choose from).

        For sleep, I have a Google Nest Mini and just tell it “Hey Google, play some pink noise”, then set the volume to barely above ambient.