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personality styles

I’m studying the impact of Aspergers Syndrome on personality styles and interpersonal communication skills at work, at home and in school.

Perhaps these resources may come in handy as you strive to understand interpersonal communication differences in co-workers, managers, students, friends or family members – it may help you help others!

What is Aspergers Syndrome? According to Tony Attwood, Author of the Complete Guide to Asperger’s Syndrome, traits include:

  • those who value being creative vs cooperative
  • a different, not defective, way of thinking
  • a desire to solve a problem vs satisfy social/emotional needs of others
  • those who struggle with the management/expression of emotions
  • direct, determined and speak their mind
  • perceive errors not apparent to others
  • and others, which you can read more about here

More experiences* of Asperger’s symptoms include:

Very bright, very sweet, vulnerable, often misunderstood and may easily be taken advantage of. They may come across like a little professor and talk in a way which leads you to believe they are years older, intellectually. They may end up being loners, struggle with relationships, work hard to impress others with their knowledge and could come across as arrogant. They may have a flat “affect” or expressionless face. Reading social cues is difficult, so they may ask more questions than what’s typical. They may also interpret you literally and say, “…but, that isn’t what I expected…”. It’s possible they’ve shown symptoms of ADD, ADHD, learning disabilities, anger management challenges, auditory processing problems, obsessive-compulsive tendencies, oppositional defiance, control issues, etc.

(* Disclaimer: the lawyers tell me to let you know right about here that I am NOT a psychologist, psychiatrist, licensed social worker, therapist or doctor! Always consult a professional.)

Megan Pratinfield has written articles about her experiences with Asperger’s symptoms. Here’s another good resource on Asperger’s with a page about famous people with “Aspy” traits.

And here’s the help4aspergers.com site, featuring information on Asperger’s at work, female traits and the book, 22 Things a Woman Must Know if She Loves a Man with Asperger’s.

Then, from the words of a young man with Asperger’s, here’s what he says it’s like:

And a final word…

If you know someone who is struggling, whether they are a child or a full-grown adult, it’s possible there may be more going on than just a difficult personality style. I’ve had people tell me their behavioral challenges stemmed from their environment, their boss, spouse, parents, the food they ate, the drugs they took and the people they hung out with.

And that may all be true.

But please do not let another day go by without learning more about Asperger’s. It could change your life or the life of a loved one!

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Ever worry about being boring?

I’ve been paying attention to what makes people pick up the phone, schedule coffee, post comments, friend you on Facebook and follow you on Twitter. And I must say, it’s NOT when you’re being “oh so professional”. People make comments on the personal posts, not so much the professional. They’re interested when you let your personality show through. They want to hire you, date you and hang out when you’ve got a life and you’re not afraid to show it.

Want to know how to beat being boring? Lean on in and I’ll share a few of my best-kept secrets:

  1. Sprinkle provocative words in your conversations and writing like “secrets, sins or sexy”
  2. Make a self-deprecating comment or two (“I hate when I trip and fall in front of my kids friends!”)
  3. Banish ambiguous high-dollar words from your vocabulary like, “organizational development” or “solutions consultant”
  4. Be a real person on your LinkedIn profile or Facebook page: mother of 5 under 5, avid collector of baseball caps, etc.
  5. Post that picture in your cubicle of the fingerling you caught on your last fishing trip
  6. Stop repeating the Starfish Story or saying, “You know what they say about the definition of insanity…”
  7. Read something other than business books
  8. Have your teenager load a few new songs of their choice on your ipod (Live a little!)
  9. Take your 70-something parents to a clothing optional hot springs, by mistake (a story for another day!)
  10. Profile behaviors and practices of people in your industry and do something different
  11. If everyone is wearing black, wear something yellow
  12. Put humorous bumper stickers on your car rather than socially assertive, angry ones
  13. Serve cookies to your employees, cook them a steak or take them all out to a 3-D movie (much more fun than teambuilding!)
  14. Let your grandkids paint the bathtub walls with chocolate pudding – or better yet, your spouse!
  15. Meet for coffee somewhere other than Starbucks for goodness sakes (how about a museum, visitors center, community garden?)
  16. Put a picture on your business card, website, brochure so people know who they’re dealing with
  17. Most of us have pets; tell us about yours!

Sometimes standing out draws people in. They’re bored by the “same old”, frustrated with politics and fearful of failing. Offer something fun, something interesting, something different. But most of all – offer something sincere!

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I had a friend over one day. We had coffee. Her’s got cold and she asked if she could warm in the microwave.

I replied, “Of course”.

A few minutes later she rejoined me in the living room and said, “Your microwave doesn’t work right.”

I was confused. “But I just heard it running and your cup is steaming. What do you mean, it doesn’t work?”

She said, “Well, I put it in with the handle facing out and punched in the same number of seconds I normally do at home. But when I opened up the door to your microwave the handle was in the back. It’s supposed to end up facing out – towards me – so I can grab it.”

“So, that means there must be something wrong with my microwave.”

“Yup, you need to get it fixed.”

A short time later I shared this story with another friend. We got talking about how we eventually figured out our personality styles without having to take an assessment; we paid attention to the small things we did or thought about every day. Those were the clues.

“For example” she said, “I think about time very differently than other people.”

I asked her, “How so?” and she drew this picture…

“This is how I think about time. In my mind, January through May and September through December don’t take up as much space.”

(This was about the time I started searching for telltale signs of an alien abduction)

“But May through August takes up a LOT of space ’cause those months I want to last longer” she said.

I then asked, “But why would you do this? Time is time. Every day has 24 hours. We can’t fool ourselves into making it last longer.”

“I can,” she said. “Besides, I have to have a way to think about it that makes sense. I mean, how do YOU think about time? Don’t you have to have someplace to ‘put it’ in your mind so you can look to see where that month belongs?”

(By then I really knew she’d been swapped out with someone who just looked like her!)

“Nope. I don’t need to see a picture in my mind when I think about time. I just use it up!” I said.

“Well, I have to have a place to put things. It makes me feel organized” she said.

And then the light bulb came on! She is a process person. Her whole life is pretty darned organized. She has cubbyholes at her desk with neat little cubicles for pads of paper, pens, paper clips and even the stapler, for goodness sakes!

I have a drawer. One day I may take the time to organize it. That will probably save me a lot of time in the long run.

She has a recipe book she’s created over the years by pulling recipes out of magazines. It’s organized according to type of food: vegetable dishes, desserts, casseroles, etc. Her file folder labels are typed. (Mine are hand-written)

But those things are not that important to me. I spend my time in other ways. (Like trying to influence people with my sparkling wit! Ha!)

So now I’m on this “kick”. I ask folks how they know their personality style from the day-to-day stuff they do. And here’s what they tell me…

  1. I space the hangers in my closet so they’re exactly half an inch apart
  2. I organize the food on my plate in the order I’m going to eat it – clockwise
  3. I never balance my checkbook; I just check online to see if there’s still money left in the account
  4. I have to leave two or three voice mail messages when I call someone ’cause those darned recorders never give you enough time to say what you need to say
  5. I have to have the garbage can cleaned out – I hate the thought of it being all smelly when the garbage collectors come
  6. I carved out foam containers to fit my tools exactly – and I’ve labeled each one
  7. People just don’t know how to load a dishwasher properly! I’m always having to go and re-arrange things after my ______ (fill in the blank: spouse, kids, mother in law) loads it
  8. Co-workers say I’m like a bull in a china shop; things just get bumped and knocked over when I’m around
  9. I eat at the sink; it takes too much time to sit down

See anything you can relate to on that list?

So, here’s the slam-bang finish and the primary way to learn more about your personality style:

It’s all about motivation. Ask yourself WHY you do the things you do.

Do you get back in your car and move it when you realize you parked it all screwy? I might not bother because parking ‘outside the lines’ isn’t a big deal for me, UNLESS it’s a crowded parking lot. Then I might be worried I’d keep someone else from being able to squeeze in. If there are a lot of people nearby, I might move the car because I don’t want to look like a dork! But I never, EVER, move my car because parking inside the lines is the RIGHT WAY to park it!

How about you? Care to share a few items on your list? How do you know what personality style you have?

And while we’re waiting, please excuse me while I go microwave my coffee!

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Ready to party? Before you get behind the wheel, let’s analyze the costs of the average DUI shall we?

  • Getting your car out of the impound lot: $250
  • Bail bond fee: $1500
  • Lawyer: $1500+
  • 10 days in jail @ $45/day (yes, they DO charge you to sit in jail): $450
  • Court costs and fees: $900+
  • Travel costs to and from the court: it varies, depending on whether you got picked up close to home or across the country while you were on vacation
  • Time off work assuming you’re able to keep your job: varies
  • Community service 10 days: cost of lost wages
  • One year of weekly alcohol counseling classes at $25 each: $650
  • 2-4 breathalyzer sessions/week for one year at $3-7 each: $234
  • MADD class: $35.00
  • Breathalyzer monitoring device on your car for two years at $77/month: $1898.00
  • The good graces of those who sacrifice their time to drive you to and fro: Hard to quantify

Lives lost and destroyed – priceless! Be careful out there – please…

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