Relief of being with my best friend

Hi folks, I wonder if any of you feel similarly about yourself.

The full topic would read "being with my best friend or laothing going somewhere with me".

I've been thinking quite a lot about why I have built such a superb fake "me" for when I go to work or when I'm out shopping etc. I know it's fake because I have to get some "real me" time at the weekends to recover amd build up strength for the next week.

I also wait longingly for the whole year for the weeks holiday when I can go off with my best friend and do the sorts of things that I really enjoy. Would it surpise any of you if I said that it was a weeks holiday on my own in the wilds of Scotland. Because in the end my best friend is me. He's {that is I'm) the only person who really understands me or knows what I like and likes doing the same things. It's like having another person there to talk to or laugh and joke with. Like meeting up with a friend you haven't seen for ages (if I knew what that was like!).

But then to balance that there is that churning loathing dread of taking you with you when going to a social event. School BBQ, my sons birthday party, christmas at my wifes relatives. I just know I'm going to mess it up and ruin it because I will get stressed and agitated and hate being there. It's almost like having a corpse stuck to you. You would desparately like to tear it off and throw it away or get away from it. But you can't it's part of you.

So, best friend and worst nightmare. Tell anyone else that and they would think Schizophrenia split personallity or the like. I suspect though that most people on the spectrum experience this to some degree. Maybe it's normal for NT's too but they bury it and ignore it.

I'd appreciate some honest (and blunt) feedback. If it is not commonplace I may be well to bring it up with my therapist to check it out.

Appreciate you all.

Dunk

Parents
  • Hi Coogy. I thought what you wrote was great. 

    Last year I finally twigged that I'm most likely an aspie and suddenly I saw the mask for what it was and it completely shattered. I just felt I had been lying all my life. In fact there were a few weeks when I almost didn't recognise myself. It's taken 9 months but I'm starting to build some confidence again.

    But that mask had been something that had grown with me since I was five sharing all those experiences and yet it just didn't seem to be me. I'm sure my wife would tell me "of course it's you" but in my heart it doesn't feel like that. Its almost like a stranger who's tagged along all your life sharing the experiences but never really been involved.

    Sorry, getting a bit too deep for a Sunday evening. Anyway you've got a lot of courage and tenacity to keep going back into that situation. Other people might not see it but it's not wasted on us.

    Dunk

Reply
  • Hi Coogy. I thought what you wrote was great. 

    Last year I finally twigged that I'm most likely an aspie and suddenly I saw the mask for what it was and it completely shattered. I just felt I had been lying all my life. In fact there were a few weeks when I almost didn't recognise myself. It's taken 9 months but I'm starting to build some confidence again.

    But that mask had been something that had grown with me since I was five sharing all those experiences and yet it just didn't seem to be me. I'm sure my wife would tell me "of course it's you" but in my heart it doesn't feel like that. Its almost like a stranger who's tagged along all your life sharing the experiences but never really been involved.

    Sorry, getting a bit too deep for a Sunday evening. Anyway you've got a lot of courage and tenacity to keep going back into that situation. Other people might not see it but it's not wasted on us.

    Dunk

Children
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