LondonUnderground
<font color=purple>Please stand clear of the doors
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2009
- Messages
- 22,127

CLEVELAND.
REALLY
LOL
sorry sarah :')
Congratulations!I GOT MY PERMIT GUYSES!DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
it turns out today, tomorrow, monday, and tuesday (my exam days) are ALL half days so my mom brought me to the DMV and I took the test and I passed and I was like "WOOHOOO!" and the lady who did my records was all like "wow you did amazing good job!" and I got my permit NOW I CAN DRIVE PARRTTTTTY.
I GOT MY PERMIT GUYSES!DDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD
it turns out today, tomorrow, monday, and tuesday (my exam days) are ALL half days so my mom brought me to the DMV and I took the test and I passed and I was like "WOOHOOO!" and the lady who did my records was all like "wow you did amazing good job!" and I got my permit NOW I CAN DRIVE PARRTTTTTY.
wat
that's it?!
you're 15 and can drive?!
daaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaang.
here, you're not allowed to have driving lessons until you're 17 and then you get your provisional license which means you have the stoopid L on your car and can't drive at certain times with certain people blahblah and then you take another test.
i think.
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CLEVELAND.
REALLY
LOL
sorry sarah :')
Congratulations!
Yay Sara!!![]()
It does sound like POTC.
It kind of sounds like POTC but not really close.
I had drivers ed when I was 14. I did driving lessons at 15 (Which was only a month later).
then you take the test, like me and now I can drive (with a parent.) with my permit. and now in 1 year I can go and get my drivers license so i can drive on my own.
I just reblogged it because he looks adorable.
Thanks Jade
Thanks Allie!
People who have misophonia are most commonly annoyed, or even enraged, by the sound of other people eating, breathing, coughing, or other ordinary sounds. They are not normally annoyed by sounds that they themselves make. Reactions to these sounds are not limited however to just loud eating noises, people with misophonia find themselves affected by all kinds of noises.[3] Such reactions are also involuntary.
Often, people who have misophonia are also annoyed by other people's repetitive movements, such as leg-tapping, nail-biting and typing.[4]
Sensitivity to these sounds tends to be exacerbated by stress or feeling tired/run down.
The onset of the symptoms appears to have a characteristic pattern, often in childhood, just prior to or during puberty. Often there is a single trigger initially (a parent or sibling's noises), then the triggers expand over time to include both auditory or visual elements. It is speculated that there is a genetic basis for this disorder as the etiological data supports a similar pattern of emergence. This remains to be determined.