The maximum score is twenty points. I scored 3 points, pretty bad, but my excuse is I have Alexithymia. If you have an abysmally low score, like mine,
you can still get by in life by adhering to the rules of proper social etiquette. If you do get a really low score, visit http://alexithymia.us and
take the online Alexithymia test. If it turns out you have Alexithymia, at least you'll know why you scored so low on the Social Stories test. If you don't
have Alexithymia, but still scored low on the SS test, then you need to work on your sensitivity.
BTW, if you've been keeping up with my emotions program, I haven't quit on it. I started working on the emotions program after moving to the country. I was only able to get DSL out here, and the max download speed was
7.5 Mbps. To make matters worse, our DSL provider was screwing up DHCP; it was killing our Chromecast devices - we rely heavily on Chromecast. I looked up what ISPs were available out here, and HughesNet looked good; told my wife, and she immediately
switched us to HughesNet. Unfortunately, I could no longer host my own website with HughesNet. After some serious effort, I got most of my website back up and running, on iPower. I've been meaning to switch from IIS to Apache for awhile now (I like
IIS a whole lot, but I decided I want to switch my main OS from Windows to Linux; Apache is the most common web server used on Linux systems), so this event just accelerate the process of switching. However, it did grind my
development of the emotions program to a halt. I only had 700 positive images ready for creating my own haarcascade file when I ran into this speed bump; I think I'll just try making a haarcascade with what I got so far, and
see how well it works in my emotions program; I'll add images as needed. Anyway, I should have another blog finished about my emotions program before the year (it'll be December of 2016 in a couple of days, as of this blog) is out.