I started typing essay assignments in English class when I was at school. I found that it was easier than writing by hand and much less tiring - my hand gets tired very quickly when I write longhand. It's noticeable after just a paragraph or two and the legibility declines rapidly thereafter. I'm sure my teacher also appreciated being able to read what I'd submitted.
I can write reasonably neatly if I take my time and concentrate on forming the letters. But it's no good if I'm trying to put down my thoughts as they come to me: my writing just can't keep up so I either scribble or lose my train of thought. It doesn't help that my fine motor control is not great, which is not uncommon in people with ASD.
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This lack of coordination seems to affect my typing a little less than my writing but then I'm only a two-finger typist. Even after over 25 years of using a keyboard I still look at the keys while I type and have failed repeatedly to learn to touch-type. I have certain typing errors that I make fairly frequently - I hit the adjacent key (such as r instead of e), I press two keys out of sequence when using fingers on both hands (and end up with teh instead of the) and I keep the Shift key depressed a fraction too long and capitalise two letters (HEllo). Despite not looking at the screen I maintain a mental picture of what I'm typing and I am aware when I've made a typo - I often even correct it without looking at the screen.
This is related to the problem I had learning piano as a child: I had trouble timing separate movements by separate fingers. It also affects me when I try to drum my fingers on a table - tapping them in a repeating sequence. After a couple of repetitions (1-2-3-4, 1-2-3-4) I start to make mistakes (1-2-4-3) and then it all goes completely wrong. And if I try it with my left hand I have trouble even getting started despite concentrating intensely. I am strongly right-handed and my right hand is considerably better-coordinated than my left. I always use my left hand for tasks involving less fine control such as holding something in place while I adjust it with my right - I'm almost unable to use tools like screwdrivers or scissors with my left hand (cutting the fingernails of my right hand requires a lot of concentration and holding the scissors in some very strange positions).

I definitely related on the writing part. (I related closely with a lot of what you've written on your blog, actually!) My writing ends up like yours: I can write neat, but my hand gets sore after a few minutes (or even less than a minute sometimes!), and the writing quality drops rapidly.
ReplyDeleteFor me with typing, I started out typing with all fingers while looking at the keyboard. After maybe four or five years of this, at one point I typed a sentence while looking at the monitor. I realized this, I wondered if I could do it again. I typed another sentence while looking at the monitor. "This is so cool!" I thought.
I do wonder how long I was able to type without looking at the keyboard before I realized it. I would still look at the keyboard sometimes, when I got stuck on where a letter was. That was taken care of by getting Das Keyboard, the version with blank keys!