Anxiety after socialising

I am quite outgoing and like to spend time with people of all types.

After a lifetime of saying the wrong things to people and losing friends, by upsetting them, I now find that I re-live every contact I have with other people. I offend people usually without realising it, only to have a chilling realisation several hours later that what I said was tactless or ambiguous etc. I enjoy a night out, then think over everything I have said and how people responded, to see if I have caused offence in any way. Every frown or whisper by/to someone else, may indicate that I have upset them in some way.

I have tried telling myself that most other people are not that judgemental and I mallign them if I think they are. Even that they would be upset that I thought them so petty. I am way too sensative to negative atmospheres and critisism.

How do I put a stop to this endless reliving of conversations, especially at night? I hate upsetting people I care about, so the more I like them, the longer I relive each potential gaffe. I like to socialise, but after, I am tense, preoccupied and stressed by reliving the event, to the point of exhaustion.

I tentatively talked to some friends once about this. They instantly said I had not caused any offence, but I could see they were fibbing. This probably proves they care, which in a way makes it all the more important not to be tactless. Aaaaaaagh it's a vicious circle I need to break.

Parents
  • I would agree that talking to an ASV person is different to talking to an NT person.  There is no small talk which I welcome. I know I'm not missing a whole load of non-verbal cues that are part of an NT conversation - almost all the meaning is in the words spoken and those words can be taken literally with no need to work out if the other person was being sarcastic or was making a joke that i failed to get. I feel as if I'm an equal partner in the conversation. Talking to an NT person I feel as if they are leading me in a dance whose steps I can only guess at.

Reply
  • I would agree that talking to an ASV person is different to talking to an NT person.  There is no small talk which I welcome. I know I'm not missing a whole load of non-verbal cues that are part of an NT conversation - almost all the meaning is in the words spoken and those words can be taken literally with no need to work out if the other person was being sarcastic or was making a joke that i failed to get. I feel as if I'm an equal partner in the conversation. Talking to an NT person I feel as if they are leading me in a dance whose steps I can only guess at.

Children
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