EYE CONTACT, TONE OF VOICE, AND DRESS
From Survival Guide for People living with Asperger's Syndrome
by Marc Segar
Eye contact
Eye contact is hard to get right because it is
hard to tell whether you are giving someone too much eye contact
or too little when they are talking to you.
While people are not talking and when you are
not talking to them, it is often best not to look at them. This
is because people can usually see that you are looking at them out
of the corner of their eyes and this may make them feel uncomfortable,
in which case they might talk about you behind your back.
To control your gaze might be difficult for you
but it is by no means impossible.
Also, pointing at people can make them suspicious
and should be avoided or at least done very discreetly.
When you are talking to someone or they are talking
to you, you are expected to look at them, bearing in mind the following
guidelines.
To look at someone for less than one third of
the time may be communicating that either you are shy (if you keep
looking down) or you are dishonest (if you keep looking to the side).
To look at someone for more than two thirds of
the time may be communicating that either you like them (if you
are looking at the face as a whole) or you are aggressive (if you
are looking straight into their eyes).
To look at someone for the whole time, giving
steady and unbroken eye contact, can mean one of two things. Either
you are challenging them (the aggressive gaze) or you fancy them
(the intimate gaze). However, in other cultures (e.g. Mediterranean
Europe), it can also symbolize companionship. For someone with autism
it can be very difficult because first, we have to be sure that
it IS appropriate. Also, fixed eye-contact can forcefully distract
us when we try to talk.
Tone of voice
You might be one of these people who almost talks
in a single tone without knowing it.
Ask a trustworthy person if this is true and if
it is, you may have to exaggerate the intonation in your voice to
emphasize what you say, but not too much. This will sound artificial
at first.
If you are reading a story-book to a child then
the more intonation, the better.
The intonation in our voices is extremely important
in determining whether we are being enthusiastic or sarcastic about
something. It is also important in telling whether we mean something
seriously or just as a joke.
To talk in a single tone can make it sound as
if you're depressed. When talking about something good or exciting,
you have to make yourself sound excited too, otherwise people tend
to think it sounds strange.
If you are a young man whose voice is breaking,
then if you find it more comfortable, just let it break for good.
It may sound strange at first on the inside but it will be sounding
much more natural on the outside. If you are worried about what
your friends might think, which should only be a short term problem
anyway, it might be useful to take the opportunity of letting your
voice break while you are changing schools.
Finally, remember not to speak too loudly and
not to speak too quietly. This should depend on the distance between
you and the other person and the voice should be quieter when a
bit of secrecy is needed. Whisper when everyone else is whispering
(or when there is someone asleep nearby).
At times when you may need to talk extra loudly
and clearly (e.g. on stage or in a play) then you may want to project
your voice. To do this, keep a nice straight relaxed posture and
imagine that your voice is coming from your stomach, however strange
this may seem.
Dress sense
What clothes you wear gives off a message about
you.
If you wear bright clashing colored clothes, perhaps
intending to look confident, many people are likely to lose interest
in you.
If you wear cowboy boots, ripped jeans, heavy
metal tee-shirts and a studded leather jacket, people might either
be too scared to come near you or will expect to be able to talk
to you about heavy metal, music systems, life on the streets and
various different night-clubs. It is a very difficult image to pull
off.
If you dress in natural colors such as blue, gray
, dark-green, black or white, which people cannot laugh at, but
still looking trendy, people will judge you on how you come across
rather than what you are wearing, which is likely to be what you
need.
It is often a good idea to hear someone else's
opinion about what you should wear (talk to someone who you can
trust).
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