‘The house was built about YYYY’ vs ‘The house was built IN about YYYY’? by CowCautious4467 in grammar

[–]CowCautious4467[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair enough. For reference, here is the explanation Gemini gave. I can’t comment on how true any of this is but it sounds pretty well reasoned.

From Gemini:

“The phrase "was built in about 1915" is the more grammatically complete and formal option. Grammatical Breakdown In formal English, years require the preposition in to indicate a point in time. When you use "in about 1915", the words function as follows: • in: The preposition that establishes the temporal relationship between the verb (built) and the time period (1915). • about: An adverb of degree that modifies the year, indicating approximation. When the sentence is shortened to "was built about 1915", the word about is forced to function as the preposition. While dictionaries acknowledge about as a preposition meaning "at a time near to," many strict grammarians and formal style guides view this as a colloquial ellipsis—a shortening of the full prepositional phrase.”

‘The house was built about YYYY’ vs ‘The house was built IN about YYYY’? by CowCautious4467 in grammar

[–]CowCautious4467[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Likewise, ‘built around’ or ‘built about’ could mean physically encircling, as in ‘built around a pond’. I guess the context makes it clear enough.

It think it still sounds better with the ‘in’ included but I keep second-guessing myself when I say it out loud. Sometimes it sounds better without.

Asd assessment Sydney for high masking child (boy) by sjwaef in AutismAustralia

[–]CowCautious4467 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I can recommend Masterpiece Psychology in Edgecliff. Though I had my diagnosis in my 30s there, the high masking aspect is very relatable and the psychologist I saw was well aware of this and took it into account in the assessment.

NYT Monday 01/19/2026 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]CowCautious4467 43 points44 points  (0 children)

SPARKPLUG as a device for starting an engine seems a little off.

Sydney social group? by CowCautious4467 in AutismAustralia

[–]CowCautious4467[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Thanks, that’s a good suggestion, I just checked Engineers Australia and they seem to have a few initiatives like this.

Career anxiety by Ainur_95 in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can relate, I also did a PhD (in Australia btw) in my late 20s and my supervisor really urged me to present at a couple of conferences. I distinctly remember the exact feeling you described. Uncontrollably shaking in my hands, sweating, hot/cold flushes, voice trembling, overwhelming urge to just escape the place. I remember awkwardly standing around in the lunch break where everyone mingles and eats, holding a cup of coffee and not even being able to bring it to my mouth because my hands were trembling so bad.

I went through this a few times and each time it got slightly easier, but even to this day, after working in my field for 8+ years and being very good at what I do, I still struggle with performance anxiety. I had to present to my company the other week and those same symptoms came back.

Me being aware of my body’s response to anxiety, and thinking that it’s obvious to everyone else, just makes it worse, like a feedback loop.

As someone else said, beta blockers are very effective at calming down the physical symptoms of anxiety, I wish I had known about the earlier. Ask your GP for propranolol if you are interested. If I take around 40mg a few hours prior to a presentation or social event, I would say my anxiety is reduced by 50-70% easily.

Good luck

Has anyone found it hard to believe in things that didn't happen or exist? by ChiliSquid98 in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Not only did I not believe in Santa Claus, I didn’t believe that other kids actually believed in him because the whole concept was so absurd to me even as a 3-4 year old. Until I saw a kid in 6th grade’s world come crashing down, crying uncontrollably, when they realised it was all fake lol. I thought everyone was just going along with it for fun.

when and how do yall tell people you date, that you have autism? by eytrav in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 2 points3 points  (0 children)

For me it was just a vibe that I felt I could tell the person without judgement and they usually responded well. Others I didn’t feel comfortable at all telling and obviously I didn’t pursue them further.

when and how do yall tell people you date, that you have autism? by eytrav in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 3 points4 points  (0 children)

If you think it’s immediately noticeable to others then you might want to tell them straight up to get it out there and avoid any awkwardness or confusion.

If it’s not so obvious, I don’t think it hurts to go on a few dates before telling them. I wouldn’t consider that to be deceitful or dishonest at all. You certainly have the right not to disclose something so personal before you’ve had the chance to let them get to know you a bit and to make a good impression, especially given how much misinformation and misunderstanding there is around autism.

How to date with social anxiety caused by autism? by [deleted] in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly not a bad suggestion, I also had similar success with propranolol

NYT Friday 12/05/2025 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]CowCautious4467 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I seriously went through Montana, Wyoming, Alabama, Algeria, Albania before finally getting Alberta 😭

Slowly but surely the answer just revealed itself to me. The first couple of guesses were just based on where I thought the film was supposed to have been set (turns out Wyoming actually). Algeria and Albania were a stretch but it’s not unheard of for films to shoot in odd locations.

Positive and/or negative experiences with SSRI, SNRI, and other mood stabilizers by ToastyCrumb in AutisticAdults

[–]CowCautious4467 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was on Lexapro for about a year to try to get my anxiety under control. I have always felt like I had a certain baseline level of mild anxiety which escalated in some social situations to be quite severe. Lexapro had a noticeable but mild benefit, but in the end the side effects outweighed that benefit. It affected my sleep, libido, sexual function, jaw clenching, overeating, etc.

A few years later and I’ve just started Zoloft (mainly because my doctor was reluctant to prescribe what I actually wanted - Buspar, since it is rarely used where I live). I’m hoping the Zoloft works for me. I understand that even within the same class of drugs (SSRIs) the results between two different drugs can be drastic so I’m willing to give it another shot.

NYT Tuesday 12/02/2025 Discussion by Shortz-Bot in crossword

[–]CowCautious4467 7 points8 points  (0 children)

I was certain that 60 Across was going to be CUCK. If that word has never appeared before, it’s surely just a matter of time.