Do you ever feel like all change is bad?

I often feel like a change is bad it seems like every single event that happens that’s out of my control is always negative. There just never seems to be a situation where something spontaneously happens in your life without you expecting it and the change ends up being good rather than bad.

Every time a place I love has a sign on its door, every time a friend or a family member tells me they need to talk. Every news article about some scheme the council has for the city, my heart is filled with dread because it feels like something is about to change and it’s going to be bad.

The last good thing in my city was probably the new cinema opening up, even though it’s a nice cinema it has taken business away from the other cinema which is now struggling. The last good thing to happen in my family was probably my brother getting a job. And that wasn’t really so spontaneous, I helped him a lot trying to get that job, and now he’s got it unfortunately he just doesn’t have as much time to support me anymore which I appreciate of course. The last really good change in my friendship group, well I think the last time I made a new friend was probably something like 2017.

It didn’t used to be like this. As an autistic person I’ve always had a complicated relationship with change. But it used to be that even if bad change seems like it often outnumbered good change there was still good change there. People would leave my life but new people would come in. The café me and my mum used to like going to might close but a new place would open.

It’s been so long since I discovered a new thing I could enjoy. A new class I could go to, A new club night I could regularly attend, A new attraction I could patronise, A new person I could really connect with.

It’s been so long since I met anyone I felt I could develop romantic feelings for. And I have to say that even though I’ve never been in a serious relationship to miss it, I miss just having someone I feel that way about.

At what stage in our lives do good spontaneous things stop happening? At what stage do we stop meeting new people we can make a connection with? stop just stumbling onto things that we can enjoy? To actually make good things happen in your life is such an effort and it’s feels more and more like banging your head against a brick wall as life goes on.

Parents
  • I've noticed the same where good changes lessen and then become practically non existent. I think this happens the older you get or it has for me. When I was younger and both my parents were well there was a lot of good changes, when old people left new came in, the estate was constantly in flowers and animals, when the old died new grew and flourished. I was never alone, a constant surrounding of people, not too many but enough that I felt comfortable and happy. The estate was a buzz of life. And then, just before Covid it became less. Slowly but surely the changes happened one by one and now today no more people, no new animals. Flowers grow but they aren't kept anymore, just wild. I think the stage occurs sometime through adulthood, probably different for everybody but I think it's something the majority of people will experience at some point in their lifetime. I don't like it either. It's scary. It feels wrong. And I hate that I've no control over it.

Reply
  • I've noticed the same where good changes lessen and then become practically non existent. I think this happens the older you get or it has for me. When I was younger and both my parents were well there was a lot of good changes, when old people left new came in, the estate was constantly in flowers and animals, when the old died new grew and flourished. I was never alone, a constant surrounding of people, not too many but enough that I felt comfortable and happy. The estate was a buzz of life. And then, just before Covid it became less. Slowly but surely the changes happened one by one and now today no more people, no new animals. Flowers grow but they aren't kept anymore, just wild. I think the stage occurs sometime through adulthood, probably different for everybody but I think it's something the majority of people will experience at some point in their lifetime. I don't like it either. It's scary. It feels wrong. And I hate that I've no control over it.

Children
  • I get that. Not so much my parents but organisations seemed to craft the environments where good things happened. When I was a teen it was typically churches. Later universities and music / club nights. It's why I keep returning to the idea of trying to start some sort of social organisation.