Hello

It took me about six hours to write the "hello" because it seemed so excessive, like royal icing on a fruit cake - the contents are rich enough without all the sugary faff of smalltalk on top.

Anyway.

I was recently diagnosed with ASD as an adult after relationship troubles.  Now I am told that my worldview is not to be relied on in emotional matters and I am left with my internal voice telling me x about a situation and my internalised voice telling my that x is probably false.  This has meant that if I feel hurt in a situation now I no longer know if my hurt is justified, and any counterclaim that it is just my ASD is irresistable.  I don't even know if what I have just written has any merit as an emotional standpoint.

I do realise that I have the emotional maturity of a 16-18 year old; I make those kind of mistakes and am that sort of reckless.  This is problematic because my (a) ASD is as it were subject to an inverse square law: it manifests itself at noticeable levels only at relatively great proximity (b) I am quite successful, first as a professional, now as an author (c) I have the Peter Pan quality i.e. not only do I look quite good for my age but I pursue my interests with a childlike joy which I can see is infectious from afar.  This means that I seem to attract people, but what is frightening is I don't see it until things have gone too far and then I become a rabbit in the headlights.

This is the thing that makes it difficult to explain to people who say "but you're normal".  Yes, I can do most things well if not excellently, but if you get beyond the usual social barriers (that I lack) then I am as misleadable as a child.  My therapist has basically advised me not to be alone with anyone I do not absolutely trust.

Whereas before I adopted the philosophy of ploughing headlong into the present, having concluded that everyone else seems to waste time that could be spent adding to the beauty of the world, I am now starting my notional GCSE on "human emotional needs and communication".  I must say I was astonished to learn that people speak with their eyes - I have started trying to look at them now (but it's very hard).

What I have also come to understand better is how my emotions fit into this equation.  I have never in my mind been an emotionless robot (tautology I know) but it seems I come across that way unless I am discuss my interest.  I always told myself that if people knew how much I truly felt they would understand, but the revelation would be too terrible for them.  A kind of mystical exceptionalism; is it that I feel more than an NT could possibly bear, or do they bear the same emotional quantity with ease?  Across the spectrum of so-called meltdowns I have not had many that I would have quaified as more than vicious anger, but the one or two extrema have been singular.  Either way, I can see how I deal with my anxiety and where I physically lock it into my body, how I can release it and manage it, and how I can develop techniques for controlled release that allow tentative examination of emotional states for what they are (rather than the binary placid-volcano which has to date characterised me).

I am hoping that this subjective practice could inform and be informed by the objectivity of human relations in which I engage myself, but as I said at the very beginning I am placed in a position in which doubt has become hyperbolic: how can I learn if my hypotheses about emotional situations are wrong a priori?  This seems to place me in the position of being utterly reliant on another, being criticised for this reliance, only to be criticised when I strike out on my own. I think I would feel better if a third party umpire - a counsellor - were involved at this stage just to assure me that some of my standpoints are indeed daft (or not).  At the moment I do not have sufficient first principles even from which to work.

That fire inside of me - and I know that this fire is even there when it has consumed the me I think I am - drives my best work.  I love this image of the Seraphim as self-consuming balls of flame closest to the light; I can get this close when I write sometimes though it is exhausting.  Yet I also realise how much this flame I stoke draws oxygen from those around me and how determinately I suck emotional life from the closest.

I am trying to reciprocate now, but every effort of donation is like cutting flesh.  Every moment of "being there for someone" I willingly give but it means opening up that which I have spent my life burying deep, baring the raw wound of my existence to the salt of tears.

Let them cleanse and heal.

Parents
  • Hello Jakob.  I've been re-reading your 2 posts.  I've drawn tentative conclusions about your situation which may be correct, partly correct or wrong, so please read what I say in that context.  Apologies in advance for any errors.  I think you're under pressure to change and that pressure appears to be coming from 1 or more people who are dissatisfied with you as you are.  You now doubt your own feelings which has made you feel insecure to a large degree.  Your idea of having a 3rd party involved, such as a counsellor who absolutely understands about autism, could be a starting point to help you untangle your feelings.  However, you are autistic and always will be, something you know about much better than I do.  Everything you try and do will be done as an autistic person, you cannot change that fundamentally.  The person(s) who are asking for this change must appreciate that.  There are some aspects of ourselves which we cannot change.  For example, an NT who is an introvert can adopt a style of being an extrovert but ultimately it can be a clever "act" which can be tiring to keep up.  A person can pretend to like someone or something, but it is still a pretence, which can be emotionally draining.  There's a quote which goes something like "the gift to see ourselves as others see us", meaning that none of us see ourselves exactly as others see us.  Of course "others" see us differently from the image we have of ourselves, if only slightly because they bring their own personalities, beliefs etc into play when they meet us, get to know us etc.  Some may like what they see, others may be disinterested, others may not like us.  We can only be true to ourselves ultimately whilst bearing in mind the feelings of others, but not by losing ourselves in the demands of those others to be what they want us to be when we cannot comply.  You are a unique individual with many qualities.  I am concerned that the demands being put upon you will affect your emotional health adversely.  However much you want to oblige, please don't make yourself unwell.  Those who have our best interests at heart should understand that.  Take care of yourself and don't be bullied.

Reply
  • Hello Jakob.  I've been re-reading your 2 posts.  I've drawn tentative conclusions about your situation which may be correct, partly correct or wrong, so please read what I say in that context.  Apologies in advance for any errors.  I think you're under pressure to change and that pressure appears to be coming from 1 or more people who are dissatisfied with you as you are.  You now doubt your own feelings which has made you feel insecure to a large degree.  Your idea of having a 3rd party involved, such as a counsellor who absolutely understands about autism, could be a starting point to help you untangle your feelings.  However, you are autistic and always will be, something you know about much better than I do.  Everything you try and do will be done as an autistic person, you cannot change that fundamentally.  The person(s) who are asking for this change must appreciate that.  There are some aspects of ourselves which we cannot change.  For example, an NT who is an introvert can adopt a style of being an extrovert but ultimately it can be a clever "act" which can be tiring to keep up.  A person can pretend to like someone or something, but it is still a pretence, which can be emotionally draining.  There's a quote which goes something like "the gift to see ourselves as others see us", meaning that none of us see ourselves exactly as others see us.  Of course "others" see us differently from the image we have of ourselves, if only slightly because they bring their own personalities, beliefs etc into play when they meet us, get to know us etc.  Some may like what they see, others may be disinterested, others may not like us.  We can only be true to ourselves ultimately whilst bearing in mind the feelings of others, but not by losing ourselves in the demands of those others to be what they want us to be when we cannot comply.  You are a unique individual with many qualities.  I am concerned that the demands being put upon you will affect your emotional health adversely.  However much you want to oblige, please don't make yourself unwell.  Those who have our best interests at heart should understand that.  Take care of yourself and don't be bullied.

Children
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