Siquo: Thanks for the link. I've just read through the introduction and first chapter and I'm actually finding it kind of funny - the themes discussed are the same ones that David Wong is always putting in those cracked.com articles, the ones I've been using to shape my perception and attitudes and become a generally more satisfied person (or at least someone who's not so easily upset, who doesn't hold on to bad feelings, who appreciates that anticipation of happiness is actually more effective than experiencing it, who makes a point of taking the more difficult road whenever possible simply because it's been proven to increase overall good feelings, etc.).
I have tried several types of meditation before, and failed utterly no matter how consistently and intensely I tried. After some long discussions with a friend of mine who studies neurology, we came to the conclusion that meditation techniques are designed to work with a neurotypical mind. Autistic brains really do work fundamentally differently from neurotypical ones. We process information differently, we perceive things differently... our whole world is different. Even the pathways and connections in our brains are measurably different. Trying to impose these methods of "mindfulness" and meditation and any other way of trying to control your mind and your thinking simply don't work on an autistic mind. (We are highly resistant to things like optical illusions and inattention blindness, for example, and things like chanting mantras have no effect on my thought processes whatsoever.) On top of that, I feel a constant need to move my body, and trying to hold it still just increases my levels of stress and anxiety, so that rules out most types of meditation right off the bat. I have found a few autistic people who say meditation is useful for them, but most seem to get the same results as me: it just doesn't work. We just can't make our minds do that.
Still, I'll read through the PDF and give it a try. It's not likely to hurt me any. : ) And it might be useful! I'll let you know what I think after I've read it.
As for the medal of Inspirational Role Model, I thank you! I didn't imagine that my little experiments would be too useful or interesting to anyone who wasn't me, but I'm pleasantly surprised to see that I can have a positive impact on other people.
I was discussing these experiments with a friend of mine over lunch the other day, actually, and she seemed impressed as well. She said she liked my approach to this stuff; she said it's like I'm "hacking" my brain and my life. I thought that was pretty excellent.
Scrdest: It sounds like you're talking about the "runner's high" - the huge rush of happy chemicals you get from pushing your body and lungs really hard for a long time. For sure this is a real thing, and I'm sure it's very effective, but it takes a lot of hard work and motivation to get to that point. This is not the only way to reap a psychological/neurological benefit from exercise. Even a tiny amount of exercise improves your overall mood. Regular amounts of tiny exercise not only keep you a bit healthier, they make you feel better about yourself, and yes, cause a release of those happy chemicals in your brain as reward for a physical accomplishment. All the research I've seen shows that our brains reward us for *all* actions that have a physical result. Compare two people who live identically in every way, except one of them always takes the stairs and the other always takes the elevator/escalator, and you'll definitely see a difference in their happiness levels.
Speaking of which, every time I ride the metro here in Prague (pretty much daily), I make sure to walk both up and down the escalators leading down to the platforms. It's not a lot of exercise, but when I started doing it, I noticed a difference pretty quickly. Especially walking up - escalator stairs are bigger than normal steps, and at first I was getting winded just walking to the top. Now I can fast-walk up the long escalators (that take 2 minutes to ride from bottom to top if you don't walk) and barely be out of breath when I finish. These little things are always a good idea.
An incredibly lazy friend of mine takes great joy in reciting this quote, no idea where it came from: "Never sit when you can stand, never stand when you can walk, never walk when you can run." He usually recites this while slouching in a comfortable chair watching reruns of House on the computer. I'm definitely a lot happier overall than he is. ; )
Here's another good article. It's the first David Wong article I ever read, and it changed the way I approached everything in my life:
http://www.cracked.com/article_15231_7-reasons-21st-century-making-you-miserable.htmlOh, and one more - this one gave me a huge boost to my social skills and finally made me understand some of the reasons why people had been reacting negatively to things I said, my whole life:
http://www.cracked.com/blog/5-ways-youre-accidentally-making-everyone-hate-you/