Alexithymia

Hypotheses. Alexithymia is not a symptom of autism. It’s a symptom of long term depression associated with autism.

When I was on antidepressants one of the first things I noticed about my mood change was that everything felt blunted. It wasn’t so much that my mood improved, it's almost like the antidepressants had made me feel slightly disconnected and disassociated from my own feelings. If you had asked me how I felt when on antidepressants I might have said I don’t know or I’m not sure a lot more than usual.

This was part of the function of the antidepressants. It allowed me to function.

It’s been suggested that a symptom of autism can be alexithymia. That something about the autistic makeup makes us less likely to be able to recognise our own feelings. I’m skeptical of this interpretation.

Have you ever heard about boiling a live frog? Bring the water up to boil quickly and the frog jumps out. Do it gradually and the frog will sit there and boil. Or people who live in houses with gas leaks who ignore it. How they become blind to the smell over time.  

I suggest that alexithymia in autism is the same kind of thing. When people have experienced negative emotion, depresion, anxiety, constantly over years, to the point where they’ve developed a learned helplessness around the situations that evoke these feelings. That this can lead to alexithymia as a form of coping strategy. That this dissociation from one’s own feelings is infact a form of emotional numbness, a form of traumatic response to long term, situation linked, anxiety and depression.

Parents
  • Yes. Glitter speaks wisely.

    Autistic need time to process feelings, to disentangle them and identify, so in the heat of the moment it is often impossible due to lack of time, so it doesn't happen on time Some are even waiting in line to get to the brain and get registered sort of, because it's too busy, it is often a case with thirst, hunger, need to urinate.

    If you're alexithymic as well, you're not able to attach identified feelings to displayed body language, or read other's feelings from body language they display. I can only guess based on statistics, narrow the list of choices.

    Alexithymia allows as well to delay processing feelings 'indefinitely'. You block their influence on you, so you can remain cold, rational, logical. But you need to learn by exprimenting how to do it. Once you start acting emotional it's to late to think about need to block and beginning to block.

    But 'indefinitely' isn't indefinite, there is a hidden gauge, and you do not know what it shows, but there is maksimum you can delay processing. Both intensity of feelings and time spent on delaying influence it. You exceed maksimum you get meltdown, guaranteed, and it can be erupting volcano if you blocked a lot. The easiest way to get meltdown in public for autistic + alexithymic. I had 5 at work during last 10 years. Very embarassing for an adult, and there are repercussions.

  • Glitter speaks wisely.

    I just love how this sentence sounds when taken out of context. XD 

  • It has more meaning in any of slavic languages, that was the reason why I said it like that Stuck out tongue In polish ''Glitter dobrze gada'', in movies and literature it is a phrase often used by one from a group of simple folk sitting and listening, approvingly nodding to a local wisemen.

    A kind of humour from eastern europe

    Often the one using that phrase is about to interject something contradictory. LOL

Reply
  • It has more meaning in any of slavic languages, that was the reason why I said it like that Stuck out tongue In polish ''Glitter dobrze gada'', in movies and literature it is a phrase often used by one from a group of simple folk sitting and listening, approvingly nodding to a local wisemen.

    A kind of humour from eastern europe

    Often the one using that phrase is about to interject something contradictory. LOL

Children
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