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Is it an autistic thing to have songs (not just words you hum to, but the tones and all of the singer, with all the pauses and intonations) going through your head nearly all the time? The specific song choice seems to be situational to what's going on with me right then. They will go on a loop for a while, until the next prompt switches the selection. And interestingly, it seems to be songs from decades ago, so maybe there's a component of my memory loss at play here?

I can still function with this din going on, but I might be a bit more distracted.

This is different from an earworm.

@autistics #ActuallyAutistic #InternalMusic

in reply to Alex

idk, but I also have this!! I've never heard of anyone else having this, so TYSM for posting šŸ™šŸ¼ i also kinda… silently hum? Like my throat makes the movements, but i don't make noise. the songs always in my head usually have kinda 'swooping' melodies, which feel the best to silently hum, so I wonder if that's linked.
in reply to ergifruit (they/he/she)

@ergifruit Wow, how wonderful we are alike in this way! šŸ˜€

I can really relate to the swooping melodies.

in reply to Alex

I love this question. It’s been an issue for me too, and how intense it is seems to be a measure of stress, somehow. I remember a difficult time in my early 20s where it was causing me notable distress — I remember walking around a foreign city on vacation and just trying to *listen* to the sounds of the place, to be present, and I couldn’t, because of my unsilenceable internal radio.
in reply to eirias

@eirias That's fascinating correlating it with a stim! That fits me at times.

Sorry you had your internal songs overwhelm your desire to be present in that city.

in reply to Alex

Yes, I am AuDHD and I have music playing in my head pretty much non stop.

It can be an earworm (which is torture) or just a song I like, or just something I heard recently like a TV show theme song.

@autistics

in reply to Alex

It's an AuDHD thing and also, apparently, some migraine sufferers experience it at as a prodromal symptom.
in reply to Dave J

@davej Good to hear that tie-in. I'll have to do further research to find ways to cope/integrate that better to be less of a distraction.
in reply to Alex

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in reply to Alex

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in reply to Alex

I have this too. Not all the time, but very often. Sometimes, when I notice it consciously, I wonder what triggered that particular loop.

It might be fx. I said to myself ā€œI feel happy todayā€ and then the song ā€œOh happy dayā€ will start looping.

in reply to ɘniɿT

@Trine_DK I hear what you're saying. And sometimes I don't realize I've shifted songs in my head, and then have to look back to try and discover what the trigger was for picking that specific one, just like you do.
in reply to Alex

@Alex @Actually Autistics I'm struggling to understand how this is any different from an earworm? An ear worm is just a song stuck in your head on repeat and people can be more or less prone to them. Often they relate to incomplete memory (the song doesn't complete and the brain basically just glitches and loops it)

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in reply to Shiri Bailem

@shiri The distinction I was making is that earworms for me were prompted by something external, such as hearing a jingle or reading a memory post.

Thanks for sharing your thoughts, Shiri.

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in reply to Alex

@Alex @Actually Autistics Honestly I don't see much difference, I think half the time it's triggered externally and you forgot the moment it was triggered. The rest of the time it's random memory associations that are set off (which you'll extremely rarely notice).

Hell, just reading this post about earworms gets them going in my head. And because thinking about earworms will make one go off it's unlikely you'll notice when you don't have one going because the mere fact of noticing cancels it out.

Regardless, definitely not something autism specific.

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in reply to Shiri Bailem

@shiri Thanks for your thoughts. Yeah, what I said could be a nuance that isn't complete.

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in reply to Alex

Yes! It's been like that for most of my life! Sometimes it is so intense that it feels almost like the music was playing for real. But not like a delusion, I'm always sure it is just in my head. (np: Rocky Horror Picture Show - Time Warp :ablobcatrave: )

@autistics

in reply to Alex

I can relate.

I wonder to which degree it is the byproduct of hyper attention to our surroundings and a coping mechanism similar to special interests (I wrote about this recently in dev.to/raphink/the-constant-ba…)

in reply to Alex

It's an article from a series I'm posting this month (3 posts to go still). Feedback most welcome!
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