Now that there is a thread about what everyones obsessions are, that being one characteristic that defines people on the spectrum, I thought I'd start one on fantasies.
Some time whan I was still on YouTube I had the fantasy of bringing together two well know aspie female vloggers, one from Ontraio, Canada, and another from Denmark, and I had the fantasy of some aspie vlogger recreating the music of some well known singer songwriter who began his recording career in the early 1960s and himself believed to have AS.
Within the same timeframe, I had a discussion on two railfan forums involing the fantasy of bulidng the Cininnati (Ohio) Streetcar to the Pennsylvania Trolley gauge, with twin trolleypole wiring and looped unidirectional running. The previous systems in Cincy and Columbus both used this gauge, and three other systems (in Pittsburgh, Philladelphia and New Orleans) still use this gauge with no sign of converting to standard gauge, which is what City of Cincinnati is effectively doing.
I have also had the fantasy of a Penna trolley gauge LRT in Baltimore, where the previous streetcar used a gauge only slightly wider.
Some time whan I was still on YouTube I had the fantasy of bringing together two well know aspie female vloggers, one from Ontraio, Canada, and another from Denmark, and I had the fantasy of some aspie vlogger recreating the music of some well known singer songwriter who began his recording career in the early 1960s and himself believed to have AS.
Within the same timeframe, I had a discussion on two railfan forums involing the fantasy of bulidng the Cininnati (Ohio) Streetcar to the Pennsylvania Trolley gauge, with twin trolleypole wiring and looped unidirectional running. The previous systems in Cincy and Columbus both used this gauge, and three other systems (in Pittsburgh, Philladelphia and New Orleans) still use this gauge with no sign of converting to standard gauge, which is what City of Cincinnati is effectively doing.
I have also had the fantasy of a Penna trolley gauge LRT in Baltimore, where the previous streetcar used a gauge only slightly wider.