Confused about the nature and experience of love.

Hi... I have been reflecting a lot just recently on life. At the moment I am struggling with how I experience /lack the experience of being loved and loving others.

I am aware that I process emotions differently to NTs. I find it hard to identify and then generalise an emotion into one specific state. I don't really get the signals from my body that would alert me to an emotion until the emotion is really strong and at times overwhelming (although this is developing at the moment). This includes love...

I have a partner who I do love, he makes me feel calm and safe which in a crazy and unpredictable world is really awesome and when I am calm I am able to sense that my heart does feel open... And this I interpret as love.

The relationship with my parents was somewhat more difficult. They had/have no idea that I am autistic and my mum found it difficult to understand some of my presentations.... interpreting them to mean that I am selfish, have no empathy and am distant. A lot of things that my mum really wanted to do in order to 'bond' with me sent me into hyper alert.. Shopping.. Going out for meals.. Hugging all terrified me. This along with the difficulties with school and friendships meant that most of my childhood was consequently spent in sympathetic nervous system mode and in this mode I could not feel love of any kind. It was like my whole system for loving and feeling loved was shut off.

As I am older and able to manage my exposure to things that activate my sympathetic nervous system and spend more time in a calmer state I have begun to notice that I am feeling more sensations from my body which I think are linked to some emotions.

Just recently I have been more open with people about my perception of the world and being autistic. This has enabled other people to open up to me too (many of whom are slef diagnosed autistic). There are a few people who really seem to understand and connect with me and vice versa. When I am talking with them or I am just with them I have started to sense this feeling in my body which I can only describe as a deep resonance, like a vibration. I don't know what this is but wonder if it might be a different form of love or if it is just a deeper sense of connection.. It isn't like the romantic love that I experience with my partner. 

Does this make sense to anyone else? Has anyone else experienced these things? 

Parents
  • I've always struggled with love too. It's quite a complex emotion and for a large part of my life I couldn't feel more than one thing at once; for example, I wasn't able to be cross with someone I loved, I would just be cross and not love them anymore.

    I also never felt loved until I met my current partner, and only then after we'd been together about 3 years. I'd known in my head for a long time that I loved him and he loved me, I just couldn't feel it. Now I can, but I have to really focus on the sensations when we are together and can't be mentally distracted by anything in order to be open and receptive to feeling loving towards him and feeling loved by him.

    I would describe the sensation as feeling "full" in my heart, and relaxed and content in my body and mind. The rest of the time I just feel empty, tense and stressed, so I guess I still find it somewhat fleeting. I'm asexual so it's mostly when we're hugging or holding hands that I feel these things; there's something about being physically close to him that I draw enormous strength, calm and comfort from. Like you, he makes me feel safe, and I don't have to mask around him so I can just be my true self.

  • Thankyou for your reply. It has made me consider so much more in this mystery of emotion and love...

    I can identify with only feeling one thing at once. For most of my life the only emotion I can remember feeling was frustration (mostly from not understanding or being understood). I would also perceive others emotions towards me as being absolute...for example when my parents were cross with me then my perception was that they didn't love me anymore. Whilst cognitively I understand that NTs don't experience emotion this way I still interpret their feelings towards me in this black and white way. This makes friendships really tricky and when I have a disagreement with anyone that is normally the end of the friendship. 

    I can also only think or feel but not both at the same time and like you will only feel love if my mind is focused on feeling not thinking. 

    I spend a lot of time on my own and when I am alone it is as if no one else exists because I can't see them or in the case of my partner feel them. I would have absolutely no idea what another person might be feeling if I am not with them in person.

Reply
  • Thankyou for your reply. It has made me consider so much more in this mystery of emotion and love...

    I can identify with only feeling one thing at once. For most of my life the only emotion I can remember feeling was frustration (mostly from not understanding or being understood). I would also perceive others emotions towards me as being absolute...for example when my parents were cross with me then my perception was that they didn't love me anymore. Whilst cognitively I understand that NTs don't experience emotion this way I still interpret their feelings towards me in this black and white way. This makes friendships really tricky and when I have a disagreement with anyone that is normally the end of the friendship. 

    I can also only think or feel but not both at the same time and like you will only feel love if my mind is focused on feeling not thinking. 

    I spend a lot of time on my own and when I am alone it is as if no one else exists because I can't see them or in the case of my partner feel them. I would have absolutely no idea what another person might be feeling if I am not with them in person.

Children
  • OMG, me too, me too! So glad it's not just me. (Literally jumping up and down here from relief!)

    For most of my life the only emotion I can remember feeling was frustration (mostly from not understanding or being understood).

    That was me too, although as a child I didn't have the emotional vocabulary for 'frustration' so just thought I was angry. It was only after I had my diagnosis and started looking back that I recognised it was all entirely frustration.

    when my parents were cross with me then my perception was that they didn't love me anymore.

    Yes to that, too. It was really upsetting.

    Whilst cognitively I understand that NTs don't experience emotion this way I still interpret their feelings towards me in this black and white way. This makes friendships really tricky and when I have a disagreement with anyone that is normally the end of the friendship.

    Same! I think it's why I've chosen the partner I have as we very, very rarely disagree on things, but I've gradually learnt it's okay when we do. I've probably only had 3 proper friends over my entire life, and I've lost all of them to single-issue disagreements.

    I can also only think or feel but not both at the same time and like you will only feel love if my mind is focused on feeling not thinking

    I know, right? I think this is the thing that NTs really struggle to grasp about us.

    I spend a lot of time on my own and when I am alone it is as if no one else exists because I can't see them or in the case of my partner feel them. I would have absolutely no idea what another person might be feeling if I am not with them in person.

    I can honestly say in the five years I've known him, i've only spontaneously thought about my partner twice when we weren't together, and then only for a few seconds, so you can imagine how little I think about people with whom I'm not planning to spend the rest of my life. Literally, out of sight, out of mind. Makes me sound like a complete cow, I know; funny thing is, I'm actually a really thoughtful, kind and generous person (in person), but I have a schedule and set reminders to keep in touch with people else I just don't notice that I haven't contacted them.

    I also have no idea what the other person might be feeling if I'm not with them in person; it doesn't even occur to me that they might be thinking about me or feeling anything at all.