Painful emotions from the cupboard of despair.

I have realised that my emotions are something that I cannot recognise or verbalise effectively.

If something unpleasant happens to me, once the initial shock is past, it is difficult to get in touch with what I feel.

I can state in a matter of fact sort of way that some bad event has happened in my life, but not with any feeling. People have sometimes assumed, in the past, that I do not feel hurt by an event, when in reality I do.

It's as though I have a locked cupboard within, that I cannot access at will. All things painful get stored there. You might think then, that the problem is gone, but something unidentifiable leeks into my day to day life, causing tension in my neck and shoulders, and errascible moods. My nearest and dearest tiptoe round me risking an angry outburst, at the slightest provocation. It's a bit like a volcanic erruption some days.

Twice in the past, I had counselling, and I watched the counsellor's frustration build as I was unable to say what they expected me to say.

Since I came off the antidepressant/antipsychotic mix, I took for 20 years, I have found that occaisionally the cupboard opens a crack, and the true feeling returns. I have a brief window where I may be able find some words for what I feel. This usually happens to me in the middle of the night, after several hours of good natural sleep. I have to be curled up in bed, in the dark and allow this to happen. All too easily I can slam the cupboard door and protect myself from the pain. If I allow it, I am briefly swamped by the memory and the pain of it, like a huge slow motion wave enveloping me, which then slowly ebbs away, leaving me exhausted and I drift into sleep again. When I wake, the memory can briefly, be clawed back if I try, but if not, it fades rapidly and can be forgotten, largely.

I assume this is some form of natural healing process.

A recent variation on this, is related to my realisation that I am on the spectrum. Some years ago, I lost someone, who took their own life. I dealt with the loss, over time. I have been struggling with the idea of autism in relation to myself, not fully understanding why I have found it so hard to come to terms with. Now I recognise, that the one I lost was the same, and have experienced overnight, once again, the sudden release of pent up anger and pain at their unecessary death. Understanding, diagnosis and appropriate help could have saved them. I dragged it back into my consciousness when I woke, as it seemed too momentous an event to be lost.

I have sometimes thought in recent weeks, that others around me could have aspergers. My thoughts have been accademic and detatched, unemotional.

Today, I woke up relaxed and have been unvolcanic in my dealings with people.

This tendancy I have, I think, may be behind all the bouts of depression I have experienced over the years.

Does anyone else think like this?

Parents
  • Re dichotomous/black-and-white thinking, this might well be true of mathematics and physics, where people actually believe theories that have made key variables into constants or approximations, and then cannot understand when the world doesn't work that way.

    I've met too many physicists with fixed ideas that cannot be wrong - Rayleigh's Criterion for example, which requires that "noise" (small scale fluctuation) be considered random, is then used to prove that noise is random. If you build the theory around an assumption you cannot use it to solve that assumption.

    Most undergraduate courses nowadays do try very hard to push students away from simplistic answers, and getting them to weigh up the different factors, and discuss. I did see that as a problem for some students on the spectrum, particularly those who felt that binary thinking was the same as Data's logic (sci fi heroes really do complicate the autistic spectrum).

    Coping mechanisms can be false hopes. They may be based on perceptions of of what is happening, coloured by the individual's own social or environmental limitations. I had devised a lot of what in retrospect were just balancing acts - where if I avoided this, and avoided that, I sort of managed until the world threw another wobbly at me, and it all crashed down.

    Coping strategies may work better when informed by understanding of autism. I found myself that meant reading lots of books - biographical, scientific, counselling based etc. An enormous range of books on autism are in circulation, and some to my perception are just twaddle - misguided professional advice with little underpinning and little real help.

    There is a need for more "living with autism" texts. Some are good, but too many are counter-productive.

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  • Re dichotomous/black-and-white thinking, this might well be true of mathematics and physics, where people actually believe theories that have made key variables into constants or approximations, and then cannot understand when the world doesn't work that way.

    I've met too many physicists with fixed ideas that cannot be wrong - Rayleigh's Criterion for example, which requires that "noise" (small scale fluctuation) be considered random, is then used to prove that noise is random. If you build the theory around an assumption you cannot use it to solve that assumption.

    Most undergraduate courses nowadays do try very hard to push students away from simplistic answers, and getting them to weigh up the different factors, and discuss. I did see that as a problem for some students on the spectrum, particularly those who felt that binary thinking was the same as Data's logic (sci fi heroes really do complicate the autistic spectrum).

    Coping mechanisms can be false hopes. They may be based on perceptions of of what is happening, coloured by the individual's own social or environmental limitations. I had devised a lot of what in retrospect were just balancing acts - where if I avoided this, and avoided that, I sort of managed until the world threw another wobbly at me, and it all crashed down.

    Coping strategies may work better when informed by understanding of autism. I found myself that meant reading lots of books - biographical, scientific, counselling based etc. An enormous range of books on autism are in circulation, and some to my perception are just twaddle - misguided professional advice with little underpinning and little real help.

    There is a need for more "living with autism" texts. Some are good, but too many are counter-productive.

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