Feeling like a Freak

So, since diagnosis in December 18, not only do I now know why I don't quite fit into normal society, I'm also trying to be a bit less awkward to try to fit in a bit more, to mostly good effect. But the thing that I have noticed is that my awareness of the social cues etc that I just don't 'get' has been magnified so much. A couple of weeks ago my attention was drawn to my tendency to take what people say as what they mean and the fact that I have absolutely no clue if someone is saying something just to be polite or if they really mean something completely different to what they say. I found myself trying to analyse what people were saying a few times, to try to work out the social undertones of the social interaction, but a drew a blank, not surprisingly. That bothers me as not only must it make me appear a bit oblivious to others, it also makes me very vulnerable, that I can have whole conversations with people and yet have no clue what they are really saying to me. This morning on the school run I was doing my usual recent thing of making a point of saying "hello, how are you?"  and smiling to people that I know (as opposed to completely ignoring them because my anxiety told me that they don't want to talk to me). To be fair, I do seem to be making progress with this and people do, in general appear to be responding better to me. But, I noticed during/after a brief conversation with another mum, I had no clue whether or not I was supposed to continue the conversation after the initial exchange of pleasantries, luckily on this occasion, the other mum kept turning back around which I figured probably meant that she wanted to chat, which we did for a bit, people aren't always this obvious, then I probably appear rude for not continuing conversations.  Luckily it was only a short walk to the school door as I run out of things to talk about quickly when doing small talk, but it was a reasonable conversation. Then there's smiling, people do this when they're engaged in polite social chat, smiling that I have come to realise is warm and friendly, I can't do warm friendly smiles, I hate my smile at the best of times as I look like a frog when I smile and I hate my teeth, my smiles very rarely reach my eyes either, unless I'm laughing at something funny. Then there's the eye contact. not just any eye contact but socially appropriate eye contact. How do people even know how to do this? Even my 4 year old daughter does this naturally and I watch her sometimes, intrigued. It's not just making eye contact and then looking away at appropriately spaced intervals, it's about people communicating information through eye contact, information which I am unable to convey or understand. Then there's the end of the conversation, I'd got to the school door and while I was glad that I'd been polite and had a conversation I also really wanted to draw it to a close and escape as I was feeling awkward, so I made an excuse about needing to speak to the teacher, which I kind of did, and wished the other mum a good day. I'm sure though that I come across as abrupt when I do this, I suddenly end a conversation with no prior warning, I'm sure most people are able to start bringing a conversation to a close before it ends to let the other person know that that is what is about to happen, totally lost on me though. So yeah, a short social conversation that probably lasted no longer than 2 minutes, but a magnitude of social skills deficit in that short space of time, a social skills deficit which is becoming more and more excruciatingly obvious to me. I guess I also realised that as much as I study social skills, I can only really change the way that I behave in social situations, I can't change my lack of awareness about other people conveying social information to me through conversation undertones/eye contact/subtle variations in tone of voice/etc; I am still 'mind blind', the information conveyed by their 'normal' neurological circuitry is completely lost on me.

Parents
  • You did better than I would have done. I wouldn't have started talking to them at all unless I knew them really well.

    You're not a freak (unless you like being a freak, in that case, go for it). You're just you. 

    I have accepted that I'm never going to fully understand/be aware of social information so I'm not going to put too much effort into it.

    The way I see it, unless I'm majorly offending someone, I should just be me. I have many strengths. Social skills is not one of them. But I would rather people like me for me rather than a me that's taking social skills.

  • Thank you :-) you know me and my mission to learn social skills! I do feel more able to be me since diagnosis but I also want to be sociable and make more friends, I've always wanted to be a sociable person with lots of friends, but I didn't know how to be that person, but now that I understand why and have my handbook on learning social skills, well I've just set my mind to becoming that sociable person with lots of friends that I always wanted to be. You know what, I know 2 or 3 people that were diagnosed with classic autism in early childhood, that now, as adults, are total social butterflies, they have loads of friends, they make friends really easily and they have really good social skills. All because they were diagnosed when they were young and received all the early intervention. I'm so envious of them, I won't try to hide it, they're so lucky that they had all of that early help. But I figure that now that I have found the resources to help myself, then I might as well go for it and make the best of a bad situation, better late than never! 

    We are however all different and we should all do what we are comfortable with doing. 

  • If that works for you then brilliant. Just don't set yourself an expectation that will make you feel like you've failed.

    Have you spoken to the people that were diagnosed young? Do they find socialising comes naturally to them or are they very good at masking? Did they struggle with socialising when they were young? I'm just intrigued as I always wonder how many social skills we can properly learn so it becomes natural rather than being an act.

  • Yeah, I guess it’s never going to be as natural for us as it is for someone without ASD, no matter how hard we practice 

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