Self-centredness and ‘being there for those who are grieving’

 I might not feel good about being self-centred but that is just plain truth and it is what makes ASD a disorder.

Recently I contacted a cousin to commiserate on the death of her mother. I was more worried about me not getting the appropriate words, tone and how I felt than the grieving cousin.

I expect my mother, sister brother father and others in society would reprimand me think less of me because I have this attitude but I am powerless over it.

Or maybe I am considering them after all but just afraid of being imperfect. 

Parents
  • You wanted to get it right for your cousin, right? If you were truely self-centred you wouldn't even have called. But you put yourself through the discomfort anyway. I'm sure that mattered to your cousin.

    What a lot of NTs don't tell you is that they trot out platitudes because it's expected. They are not all paragons of selflessness and consideration. They just find it easier to utter the right words.

Reply
  • You wanted to get it right for your cousin, right? If you were truely self-centred you wouldn't even have called. But you put yourself through the discomfort anyway. I'm sure that mattered to your cousin.

    What a lot of NTs don't tell you is that they trot out platitudes because it's expected. They are not all paragons of selflessness and consideration. They just find it easier to utter the right words.

Children