I've actually learned some social skills

I have never been great with people. More a spectator of what happens around than an actor of my own life. I have always felt different degrees of loneliness, even now that I am happily married.

However, I can say that actually learned social skills. The turning point happened in my twenties, and the interesting thing is how good but how limited in scope they are. They are so good that almost no-one can believe I am within the spectrum these days, but so limited that my ability to connect remains extremely poor.

To give you an example, I am really good at job interviews. I have not had many, but most of them have ended with a job offer. However, I have failed at pretty much every job due to not understanding of what's expected from me and my inability to make connections. So what is different? I think it is depth.

I have learned how to make most people like me when they first meet me. I cannot really explain how I do it as it has become second nature, but after years of observation and practice I now know how to use words and body language in a way that most people feel comfortable and like me. I think I smile a lot, look for clues on what people feel and what they are interested in, and make it easy for them to be open about it. What I have not learned is how to do the next step, how to actually connect.

I think the reason is that my observation and analytical skills cannot make up for my lack of intuition, common sense or however you want to call that intangible skill. I understand people, and some aspects I understand extremely well, to a point that baffles others. But understanding how car steering works is not the same as being a good driver. You need to be able to feel the car going one way and naturally steer it in the opposite direction just the right amount. At the same time, you need to play with the gas, the brake and the gears. You cannot rationalise all that. It requires a deeper connection that t you ether feel or you don't.

And I don't.

Parents
  • That's interesting to hear. I am the same I think. I used to be completely hopeless in social situations and suffer from bad anxiety, but through watching how others behave and YouTube videos which tell me how to respond to certain things and what not to do/say, I have gained the ability to simulate normal human interaction.

    Most of these things are things that come naturally to others and that they learn without effort from a young age, but for me it was a conscious and intentional learning process, and to this day it requires concentration and memory to respond in the correct way - even to simple things like someone saying "hello" or "how are you". In the past I would sometimes not respond at all, or just say "I'm OK" without follow up, but I know now that I'm meant to ask them how they are, and every conversation should have this back-and-forth interplay like a game of tennis.

    It does not come naturally to me and I have never made a real connection with anybody - never had a friend. I can only pretend to be normal but I don't know what the next step for becoming friends is.

    I also do well in job interviews now because I learnt about mirroring (I will copy the hand and leg positions of the interviewer), and make myself smile after they have spoken, and all these other tricks. But all of this is a lot of effort and I get burnout when I have to do it all the time, which is why once I start the job in the office environment I tend to shut down completely and even become non-responsive.

    And I still struggle with knowing when people are joking or subtext. I've often made a fool of myself - always seem to be the last to get a joke or ask questions about what someone has said because it confused me when it shouldn't have been taken literally.

  • Making friends is tricky because you cannot make a friend unless you are honest. You cannot pretend to be someone you are not. However, if you fake who you are, you will have more chances of people wanting to know you.

    What I am doing recently is trying to be quite upfront: "Yep, I think I am autistic". "Sorry, I don't always get these things" "I cannot read between the lines" "I am quite literal" Or even "I am going through a bit of a depression at the moment". This way, I think I remove part of the weirdness around me because many cards are on the table, and these days people are more open minded. Some people may not feel comfortable, but In the end, I will only manage to connect with people that are comfortable with who I am.

Reply
  • Making friends is tricky because you cannot make a friend unless you are honest. You cannot pretend to be someone you are not. However, if you fake who you are, you will have more chances of people wanting to know you.

    What I am doing recently is trying to be quite upfront: "Yep, I think I am autistic". "Sorry, I don't always get these things" "I cannot read between the lines" "I am quite literal" Or even "I am going through a bit of a depression at the moment". This way, I think I remove part of the weirdness around me because many cards are on the table, and these days people are more open minded. Some people may not feel comfortable, but In the end, I will only manage to connect with people that are comfortable with who I am.

Children
No Data