Old habits die hard

I think I was born with a foot in my mouth. I've spent a lifetime responding inappropriately so I learned not to offer a conversational response or to reply with some bland generic reply that may have allowed me to save face but didn't endear me enough to be befriended. This has been part of several lifelong lived-in masks. I've learned through many negative experiences not to be open enough to show my inner feelings. I can recall as a youngster being called a "cold fish" by my mother. I presume this was because I did not display what should have been appropriate signs of affection for any given and appropriate circumstances. It's been a long uphill attempted climb out of my hollow numbness with many failed attempts. I must not complain. I've been fortunate enough to have had a varied interesting life experience despite being friendless. I've achieved this through my adoption of many differing "defence mechanisms"---old jargon for masking. This brings me around to my recent discovery of this wonderful forum where I can relax a bit and not have to concern myself too greatly about dropping "clangers".  I hope to be allowed a certain amount of "slack" if and when I do drop a clanger. Despite my 50+ years of residence here in the UK, despite my inability to properly integrate, despite my inabilities to hold a lengthy verbal conversation, despite my inabilities to display appropriate emotional gesturing and response, despite these and probably several other inabilities, in hindsight I believe my life would have been quite different had I remained in NYC---but not necessarily a better quality of life.  My baggage would have still had an impact, and frankly I don't think I would have survived to my present age in NYC.  I am thankful and count my blessings to be here, so please bear with me by cutting me some slack.

Parents
  • Regarding our prior intereactions I find the best way to have an actual conversation is to remember it is possible to at least entertain another person's point of view without accepting it. When we encounter people with vividly different experiences than ourselves it doesn't make ours the only correct one just because we haven't experienced the otherside personally. Even if our experiences and personalities are incompatible it is always worth trying to keep our phrasing respectful and kind to keep a dialogue open.
    I try to give everyone the benefit of the doubt but I must be honest I found some of your phrasing in previous threads to be so abbrasive and confrontational it was very difficult to find any kindness to reflect back. But I have read some of your other replies and posts if I came across them since then, and have (I hope) come to realise you had simply came at me already emotionally charged in those prior incidents as from your own words on other posts you seem to find more issues and not find much joy in your autism compared to some others on this site.
    I hope this isn't petrol on a bonfire. But as it is the season of good will I would like if we could draw a line under our past interactions (it wasn't a good first encounter) and move forward to give eachother the chance at a do-over with eachother.

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