Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 My parents have just recently had a big discussion about me 'their troubled son'. They still think that I am a hypochondriac NT and have never had any unusual childhood problems. A lot of my AS was hidden from them as I was always very private, self conscious, independant quiet and shy. Their ignorance and blindness is stressing me. If I say anything new they think 'Oh God! here he goes again.' I have now decided that I will create a long list of my dysfunctional traits, esp relating to my childhood, in the hope that they will remember how weird I really was. I hope to throw it all in their face and challenge them to explain it as a whole. I had a very big problem with crying. I would get upset very easily, start to cry and then spend half an hour trying my very, very best to stop crying. I realised that the initial reason was not the same reason that fuelled my tears. Maybe it was my anger with myself. After a few years I got so angry with myself that I promised not to cry again. And I didn't, which also became a problem. So I wondered if all of this was good ammo for my list. Anas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 I had the same problem... We should add this to the put-down list (I forgot who was keeping it). Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 I had a very big problem with crying. I would get upset very easily, start to cry and then spend half an hour trying my very, very best to stop crying. I realised that the initial reason was not the same reason that fuelled my tears. Maybe it was my anger with myself. After a few years I got so angry with myself that I promised not to cry again. And I didn't, which also became a problem. So I wondered if all of this was good ammo for my list. Anas *************** Well, it sounds like extreme adolescent problems to me. Id say crying is better than conciously not crying. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 This message from gareth arched across the cosmos: >Well, it sounds like extreme adolescent problems to me. Id say crying >is better than conciously not crying. I agree. I've been trying to learn how to *not* fight crying, as I'd forced myself to squelch the urge a long time ago, and I think that the built-up pain hasn't been very good for me. I would cry easily, and I do start to, but then I fight it by silently verbally abusing myself into being so hateful towards myself that I shut my feelings off. :-( My AC partner cries quite easily, otoh... I admire him a great deal for being brave enough to cry, not just as a person in general but especially because he's male and I realize that members of his gender are still heavily discouraged from crying for any reason, around anybody or even alone. If I can't do that as a " strong woman " even around my partner, I can't even begin to imagine being male in American society and being strong enough to cry (or have a sobbing meltdown) at work or otherwise in public. The risk of ridicule from gender-bigoted idiots, let alone the memories of growing up being sneered at, must be immense. I was shocked to find after so long that it's *harder* to let myself cry around people, even him. He is trying to teach/convince me that it is OK to show sensitivity/emotion, but it's hard to learn... I start fearing (from experience with others, including my ex) that he will call me names or otherwise indicate I am weak, though I know that he wouldn't do either of those things. I've been slowly grasping that it's safe during visits, just because I keep having crying meltdowns where I can't control the tears, and he comforts/calms me gently rather than being nasty like other people have been in the past. Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of the particularly " sick " ways it does it. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > I had a very big problem with crying. I would get upset very easily, > start to cry and then spend half an hour trying my very, very best to > stop crying. I realised that the initial reason was not the same > reason that fuelled my tears. Maybe it was my anger with myself. > After a few years I got so angry with myself that I promised not to > cry again. And I didn't, which also became a problem. So I wondered if > all of this was good ammo for my list. > *************** > Well, it sounds like extreme adolescent problems to me. Id say crying > is better than conciously not crying. I always, from childhood, had a " problem " with crying. In that I would cry uncontrollably at inconvenient times apparently. The weirdest thing to me was that if other kids were teasing me, and I started crying, I would *get in trouble for crying*. Yet one time a girl hit me, and when I tried to tell a teacher, *she* cried, and the teacher said " How could she have done that? Can't you see she's crying? " And I was always accused of being a crybaby or crying too much, but when other (NT) girls cried it was always taken very differently. I continued to cry a lot but had almost a phobia around crying after awhile because of how many bad things used to go along with it. (My dad in particular -- in childhood, not recently -- used to do very overloading things to me to try to get me to stop crying, and used to yell at me to " quit blubbering " , and the sheer overload of the emotion and noise sent me into this shrieking terrified state that I have rarely approached since, so that certainly backfired.) Sometime in the past couple years my dad told me that in childhood I used to randomly start screaming and crying " for no reason " and be completely inconsolable. I'm *guessing* this was either overload or a reaction to cumulative abuse, and I'm not sure which. He insisted on differentiating it from my brother (also autistic) and his inconsolable crying, but his differentiation didn't sound very convincing at all. I seem to have had a lot of the same training around " not crying " as males typically get, and I'm not entirely sure why except that there must have been something about the *way* I cried that made people disapprove of it as much as they disapprove of it in male children. It didn't stop me from crying, but it made me very, very ashamed of crying and made me try to cry only in private. (I've only been not-afraid of crying in front of people in the past couple years, and even that isn't absolute.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of > the particularly " sick " ways it does it. If the " no crying " rule is merely sick, then what is " stop crying before I give you something to cry about " ? ____________________ " I'm easily confused. It's part of my boyish charm. " -- Kaiden Fox Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > I was shocked to find after so long that it's *harder* to let > myself cry around people, even him. He is trying to teach/convince > me that it is OK to show sensitivity/emotion, but it's hard to > learn... I start fearing (from experience with others, including > my ex) that he will call me names or otherwise indicate I am weak, > though I know that he wouldn't do either of those things. I've > been slowly grasping that it's safe during visits, just because I keep > having crying meltdowns where I can't control the tears, and he > comforts/calms me gently rather than being nasty like other people > have been in the past. That's unfortunately very much what it's like for me. I generally either got called weak, melodramatic, manipulative, or childish for crying, and got punished for it. (Manipulative is the weirdest because I *cannot* cry on demand.) And my ex also didn't help in those matters (anything I cried about, he mostly said " deal with it " or " Look, you didn't come with a crazy girlfriend manual, okay? " ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 I've been working with that quite a lot over the past few years. From late childhood, up until only about two years ago, it was simply impossible for me to do in the presence of others. It has always been possible for me to cry while alone, most especially when moved by music ( " Turn of the Century " by Yes, for example). But rarely did I feel this was motivated by my own grief---I always had other " explanations " for what I was feeling, due to the iron-fisted injunctions against " self-pity " under which I grew up. Crying in the presence of others was not just a no-no---it was a no-can-do. But that has changed to some extent. Before, I was simply unable to access the grief while in the presence of others. But having spent much of the past five years exploring my own emotional issues in considerable depth, I find I am often able to " choose " grief, if the conditions are right and depending on who I'm with. Then, when I got emotionally " broadsided " in April of '02, I was fortunate enough to have an acquaintance who actually welcomed my all-out display of grief, if only for a short time. This showed me that it was possible for me to be in a mode of full emotional authenticity even in my " weakest " state, given that I was in the right company. For the year that followed, I cried pretty much every day, and it was only after moving back to Missouri that it stopped altogether. In fact, I can't help but be a little suspicious of that. My feelings about what happened haven't changed much, they're just harder to access (except the resentment), and I can't help but wonder if it's due in part to the old knowledge and fear that male grief is far less tolerated here. If that's the case, and I'm sure it's at least partly true, then it's just one more aspect of the local culture that I don't need. I've got problems enough without being alienated from my own emotions. On the other hand, I have done a lot of healing, and now that my parents have " come around " , so to speak, in their view of me, I don't feel nearly as alone as I always have in the past. Unfortunately, that makes very little difference with regard to facing the " practical " issues of my future---I still feel pretty helpless and hopeless most of the time, it seems I'm just a little more detached from those feelings now. And, as ironic as it may seem to some, I'm really not comfortable with that at all. It's like I need something to have a good wail about, or I begin to wonder if I'm really alive. Hmmm... :-\ --DKM > This message from gareth arched across the cosmos: > >Well, it sounds like extreme adolescent problems to me. Id say crying > >is better than conciously not crying. > > I agree. > > I've been trying to learn how to *not* fight crying, as I'd forced myself > to squelch the urge a long time ago, and I think that the built-up pain > hasn't been very good for me. I would cry easily, and I do start to, but > then I fight it by silently verbally abusing myself into being so hateful > towards myself that I shut my feelings off. :-( > > My AC partner cries quite easily, otoh... I admire him a great deal for > being brave enough to cry, not just as a person in general but especially > because he's male and I realize that members of his gender are still > heavily discouraged from crying for any reason, around anybody or even > alone. If I can't do that as a " strong woman " even around my partner, I > can't even begin to imagine being male in American society and being strong > enough to cry (or have a sobbing meltdown) at work or otherwise in > public. The risk of ridicule from gender-bigoted idiots, let alone the > memories of growing up being sneered at, must be immense. > > I was shocked to find after so long that it's *harder* to let myself cry > around people, even him. He is trying to teach/convince me that it is OK > to show sensitivity/emotion, but it's hard to learn... I start fearing > (from experience with others, including my ex) that he will call me names > or otherwise indicate I am weak, though I know that he wouldn't do either > of those things. I've been slowly grasping that it's safe during visits, > just because I keep having crying meltdowns where I can't control the > tears, and he comforts/calms me gently rather than being nasty like other > people have been in the past. > > Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of > the particularly " sick " ways it does it. > > > DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > > > Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of > > the particularly " sick " ways it does it. > > If the " no crying " rule is merely sick, then what is " stop crying before I > give you something to cry about " ? > In my manual, that's referred to as " emotional abuse, criminal grade " . --DKM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > I've been trying to learn how to *not* fight crying, as I'd forced > myself to squelch the urge a long time ago, and I think that the > built-up pain hasn't been very good for me. I would cry easily, > and I do start to, but then I fight it by silently verbally abusing > myself into being so hateful towards myself that I shut my > feelings off. :-( This isn't quite the same thing, but I just remembered something that used to happen a lot. (So if this seems unrelated, it's because it's a tangent, I'm up late, and I need something to do, so I'm writing about it. I *don't* think it's an autistic thing, although there may be a fair amount of us that get driven to this state eventually. It's basically a discussion of PTSD, so skip it if you don't want ramblings and analysis on prior misery. I'm having a really bad night that way and can't sleep, so I'm at least trying to make use of it.) There was a time in my life when I was experiencing a whole lot of horrible things, pretty much 24/7, no escape at all, and no escape in sight. And a lot of things happened that I logically thought *should* make me cry. But I couldn't cry at all. I tried to do it, and there was nothing there at all, not even the urge to cry (except as a sense that I really should be crying with the things that were going on). I decided there was something terribly wrong with me for not crying, and I tried to fake crying by rubbing spit on my cheeks and screaming. But I couldn't feel anything and I couldn't cry, and then the attempt to fake crying made me feel even more ashamed of myself, and even more sure that I was basically this rotten monster. The weird thing was that the rest of the time I had hated crying, and during this period I hated not being able to cry. I kind of oscillated between " I am bad because this is a situation that should make people cry and I am not crying " and " I am bad because the reason I am not crying is because this is not a situation that should make people cry and therefore I should not be upset but since I'm upset then I'm bad. " This sort of thing was reinforced by people around me insulting people for both displays of emotion and lack of displays of emotion. I really wish someone had explained PTSD (or any equivalent and useful model) to me at the time in a context I could understand, because I was certainly around people who were at least in theory trained in that kind of thing. At the time I came up with a whole lot of explanations that were rather terrifying. The only problem is I don't know if any explanation would have worked, because I remember someone telling me that I'd been going through some really awful stuff (and comparing it to prisoner-of-war situations) and I kept reacting with something like, " No I haven't. Nothing mind-blowingly awful is going on, it's just me screwing my own life up. I don't even know how you could draw those comparisons, because nothing like that is going on here. " And I wasn't lying -- I had no clue how you could compare the two situations at all, despite the fact that objectively they were similar. My standards were pretty low back then, though -- it took something both horrible and immediate to even register on my awful-meter, and even things like deaths weren't always registering. Which I think is part of why I wasn't crying; my standards for " good " were so low that I don't think most people would accept them at all. This, by the way, relates to the Stockholm syndrome discussion: I sincerely believed they were wonderful people for restraining me face-up, allowing me to eat from time to time, and failing to kill me, and they *treated* these things as privileges. I thought *I* must be a horribly ungrateful person not to enjoy the life they were giving me. Things like being let out with the other patients to do the single-file outdoor walks or go to the cafeteria were things that at that point I had no more conception of doing, and I *knew* it was because I was the " bad " , " disruptive " , " immature " one, and not someone who even deserved to cry because I'd brought everything on myself. But these people were of course wonderful for letting me live, and letting me do anything else they let me do. I think I really cried the least when the worst things were happening, and there's a long stretch where I barely, if ever, cried at all, probably the least I've ever cried in my life. The thing nobody warned me about was that once I got safely out of the system, off the drugs, and away from everything, I'd have nights like tonight where I cry *randomly* about these things, with no warning. The people who had to tell me that weren't trained in psychology, but were other autistic people. (I read something recently about how they're finding that training in psychology doesn't render people much more understanding of other people than the average layperson, and I think I probably could have told them that -- the people who have understood me best and taught me the most about how to live my life have not been professionals, and I've seen and sincerely tried to utilize a lot of professionals.) There was also a weird, seductive feeling of invincibility that was frequent at the time and that I hope I never come near again. I think it was more a desperation thing combined with a " What could you possibly do to me now? " thing, which definitely resulted in the kind of behavior that most people don't want to be around. I'm not sure I want to know what they made of *that*, because it was definitely one of my low points in the scheme of morality (among other things I'd decided I was dreaming the whole thing and could do whatever I wanted and that the people didn't really exist, and you can see where that could go). The weird thing is that the lack of crying thing still happens sometimes. The other night I was looking through a bunch of parent-oriented message boards (I posted what I wrote at the time to another list) and I could feel *nothing*. It was the same thing -- I knew I should feel something at the stuff I was reading, but there was not much there, just kind of a blank, disappointed feeling. And that pretty much continued until tonight. Which is what's going on now. In part that my standards have gone up -- I no longer accept either imprisonment *or* flashbacks as inevitable. Thus, the threat of either one of those things is much scarier to me than when either one, the other, or both were so much part of life that I didn't think about them not being there any more than I used to think about going to the cafeteria or being on " level three star " . And tonight I'm getting pretty freaked out, doing the random crying thing (took me completely by surprise when it happened), and being scared of what could happen. I'm back now where I know rationally that nobody's going to beat down my door and take me anywhere, but a couple hours ago I couldn't convince myself of that at all. (Someone *is* going to knock on my door from a taxicab company in a few hours, though, so I *wish* I could sleep.) I'm hoping this will be brief, because I've got no desire whatsoever for another prolonged period of random mental time-jumping. And I know a small amount of that must have been going on tonight, because I couldn't convince myself earlier that I lived in my own apartment and that nobody was currently watching me or even capable of knowing the emotional state I was in. And I really don't like that in-between state where my mental processes are clearly superimposed from another time but I can still technically see what's going on in this time. (Last time this happened my aide came in and I couldn't talk to her at all because all the misplaced-time-travel thoughts I had were telling me that telling someone what was going on in my head was too risky. And I'm having a little trouble with this email because while I know in my head that it's simply a factual account of how I felt and what I was doing to the best of my recollection, I've still got Lois and Pam in my head telling me that to discuss things like this is a horrible and manipulative thing to do.) 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Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 This message from alfamanda arched across the cosmos: >That's unfortunately very much what it's like for me. I generally >either got called weak, melodramatic, manipulative, or childish for >crying, and got punished for it. (Manipulative is the weirdest >because I *cannot* cry on demand.) Yes, exactly what I have been accused of, by people all around me and by my ex while we were together. I couldn't figure out how it is that I was being " manipulative " by crying if I was hit, or if I saw (or read or thought of or was told) something deeply upsetting. I never was manipulative to actually get what I wanted, so why would I be " manipulative " if I became distraught at something genuinely disturbing? > And my ex also didn't help in >those matters (anything I cried about, he mostly said " deal with it " >or " Look, you didn't come with a crazy girlfriend manual, okay? " ) Sounds like we had near-identical ex'es. I become upset at a lot of the " traditional " autistic things, and when that happened, he would just tell me to grow up, stop trying to be controlling/manipulative, and so forth...he ultimately said I was deeply emotionally abusive because of my crying in particular. When we were together in the same room, if I started crying, he would do various things to force me to shut down -- whole-body restraint so I would exhaust myself being rigid (I didn't like him holding me, unlike P), pushing french-kisses on me, or asking me repeatedly something like " are you upset? " and when I didn't answer the way he liked (often because I was too upset to even comprehend I should lie), he would hit me in the face/head with a pillow and shout " wrong answer! " then ask again, repeating the cycle until I was too tired to *be* upset. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > This message from gareth arched across the cosmos: > >Well, it sounds like extreme adolescent problems to me. Id say crying > >is better than conciously not crying. > > I agree. ******** Cool. Im going to go get a brew (thats coffe in american) and respond to the rest of your post. Im not sure what im going to say, which is unusual for me..... (on list0 ******** > > I've been trying to learn how to *not* fight crying, as I'd forced myself > to squelch the urge a long time ago, and I think that the built-up pain > hasn't been very good for me. ********** Uhhu, me too. I used to *cry* myself to sleep with my teddy through the first years of secondary school even, wishing my parents would walk in and find me. ********* I would cry easily, and I do start to, but > then I fight it by silently verbally abusing myself into being so hateful > towards myself that I shut my feelings off. :-( ********** Uhhu, hmm. I have a tendancy to not know how i feel cause my brain is going into overdrive trying to figure out how im *supposed* to feel, like a semi survival thing, so what i feel gets squashed. ********** > > My AC partner cries quite easily, otoh... I admire him a great deal for > being brave enough to cry, not just as a person in general but especially > because he's male and I realize that members of his gender are still > heavily discouraged from crying for any reason, around anybody or even > alone. *********** Yes, this is true. Im not even competent at explaining verbally why i feel bad if and when i do, its a part of me that was strongly discouraged. Anger is " good " as a replacement, encouraged even. *********** If I can't do that as a " strong woman " even around my partner, I > can't even begin to imagine being male in American society and being strong > enough to cry (or have a sobbing meltdown) at work or otherwise in > public. ************* Well, wouldnt a natural woman be crying, not really a " strong woman " , or am i missinterperating? ************ The risk of ridicule from gender-bigoted idiots, let alone the > memories of growing up being sneered at, must be immense. ************* Hmm, yes. I thought " oh, its such a shame that people do that " then i realised that i may well do the same if other people were around. Maybe not, but i did detect the possibility in myself, like an ingrained automatic reaction. Like, make fun of somebody for it. I dont think i would, and i never have except for at school...... but, there you are. ************ > > I was shocked to find after so long that it's *harder* to let myself cry > around people, even him. He is trying to teach/convince me that it is OK > to show sensitivity/emotion, but it's hard to learn... I start fearing > (from experience with others, including my ex) that he will call me names > or otherwise indicate I am weak, though I know that he wouldn't do either > of those things. **************** I wonder why it has gotten harder? maybe you are less upset so want to cry less? **************** I've been slowly grasping that it's safe during visits, > just because I keep having crying meltdowns where I can't control the > tears, and he comforts/calms me gently rather than being nasty like other > people have been in the past. **************** I remember once juli had a melt down. It was horrible to see her like that, i felt so small. Like crying and making screech noises, she was. I come to quite a shut down in my head at times, but have never done something like that. **************** > > Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of > the particularly " sick " ways it does it. ***************** Yes, it is a dumb one. I suspect people think of me as sexist, but i believe quite strongly that there are large inherant differences in the sexes that should be naturally encouraged, but these external rules are not part of any gender difference, they are unnatural, and harmfull. ****************** > > > DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy ******************* Gareth. :-) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 Sounds like we had near-identical ex'es. I become upset at a lot of the " traditional " autistic things, and when that happened, he would just tell me to grow up, stop trying to be controlling/manipulative, and so forth...he ultimately said I was deeply emotionally abusive because of my crying in particular. When we were together in the same room, if I started crying, he would do various things to force me to shut down -- whole- body restraint so I would exhaust myself being rigid (I didn't like him holding me, unlike P), pushing french-kisses on me, or asking me repeatedly something like " are you upset? " and when I didn't answer the way he liked (often because I was too upset to even comprehend I should lie), he would hit me in the face/head with a pillow and shout " wrong answer! " then ask again, repeating the cycle until I was too tired to *be* upset. DeGraf ~*~ http://www.sonic.net/mustang/moggy **************** Ok; *Why did you go out with this guy!!!!!!!!!!* ? I mean seriously, its probably this thing that most angers me about women; They go out with men that treat them bad, then complain about it to people like me who only try to be good to them, but wouldnt look twice at us in a sexual sense. I know you now have Parrish, who is presumably a good guy by all accounts, but so many women just keep going with the bad guys, which 1) means the bad guys have no reason to stop, indeed, they are rewarded for their misdeeds in ways that i can only dream of 2) the women still gets abused. Maybe im being to logical about all this, one common reason i hear is " you cant control who you love " but it all seems so dumb to me. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > Maybe im being to logical about all this, one common reason i hear > is " you cant control who you love " but it all seems so dumb to me. > > Gareth. I have no clue why love is so mystified. We are taught that hate is a choice, that hate has causes and factors and is not mysterious and is not too difficult to overcome. Yet love... love is not a choice. Love is something that just happens, like a bird shitting on your car. Sure you can go looking for love, or bird shit, but it's not something you can control because it's so damned mysterious. I can't complain about women who love assholes, simply because I've loved assholes myself. Perhaps there is something inate about having to work for affection, rather than having it given freely. I changed my mind about the whole thing and absolutely jettisoned romance after living with a sociopath. This woman is so sadistic that she *sought out* someone I hated just so that she could move in with him to *annoy* me. ____________________ " I'm easily confused. It's part of my boyish charm. " -- Kaiden Fox Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > > > Maybe im being to logical about all this, one common reason i hear > > is " you cant control who you love " but it all seems so dumb to me. > > > > Gareth. > > I have no clue why love is so mystified. We are taught that hate is a > choice, that hate has causes and factors and is not mysterious and is not > too difficult to overcome. Yet love... love is not a choice. Love is > something that just happens, like a bird shitting on your car. Sure you can > go looking for love, or bird shit, but it's not something you can control > because it's so damned mysterious. > > I can't complain about women who love assholes, simply because I've loved > assholes myself. Perhaps there is something inate about having to work for > affection, rather than having it given freely. I changed my mind about the > whole thing and absolutely jettisoned romance after living with a sociopath. > This woman is so sadistic that she *sought out* someone I hated just so that > she could move in with him to *annoy* me. *********** Oh, i thought you were happy with somebody now? i hope nothing went wrong. I really like your birdshit metaphor, may i " steal " it please? All the best, Gareth. > > ____________________ > " I'm easily confused. It's part of my boyish charm. " > -- Kaiden Fox Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > Oh, i thought you were happy with somebody now? i hope nothing went > wrong. I really like your birdshit metaphor, may i " steal " it please? Stealing birdshit? What a concept... go for it. I am fine and dandy, now. I was just bitching about the past. I do that, sometimes. I perseverate on how much I would enjoy throwing acid on my ex-girlfriend's face and watching her skin melt off. Yeah, I'm a vengeful bastard - me and Timberlake should get together sometime. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > > > Oh, i thought you were happy with somebody now? i hope nothing went > > wrong. I really like your birdshit metaphor, may i " steal " it please? > > Stealing birdshit? What a concept... go for it. > > I am fine and dandy, now. I was just bitching about the past. I do that, > sometimes. I perseverate on how much I would enjoy throwing acid on my > ex-girlfriend's face and watching her skin melt off. Yeah, I'm a vengeful > bastard - me and Timberlake should get together sometime. *********** doncha mean eminem? what has justin timberlake done? glad to hear your current relationship is ok. What job do you do? im sorry, ive forgotten now, how rude of me. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 Hello to all, especially those who've written on this thread, I joined this listserv because although I've never been diagnosed (I'm 49), I have a 6 year old daughter who is high-functioning autistic, and I recognize myself in lots of her symptoms. Since joining this listserv and reading many of the posts, especially this thread on " Cry Baby " , I feel a very strong need to offer a truely heartfelt and loving virtual hug to all. I mean this in the spirit of empathy, so I hope noone takes this the wrong way. It makes me very sad to realize how much pain has been suffered by so many gentle souls, although I have learned a lot from reading the many posts. Not only have I learned a lot about myself, but because so many of you have been so forthcoming about problems you've faced, I feel I've learned a lot that can help my daughter especially. I wish all of you much love and more gentle handling from the world than you've experienced so far. Elaine Re: Cry baby > I've been trying to learn how to *not* fight crying, as I'd forced > myself to squelch the urge a long time ago, and I think that the > built-up pain hasn't been very good for me. I would cry easily, > and I do start to, but then I fight it by silently verbally abusing > myself into being so hateful towards myself that I shut my > feelings off. :-( This isn't quite the same thing, but I just remembered something that used to happen a lot. (So if this seems unrelated, it's because it's a tangent, I'm up late, and I need something to do, so I'm writing about it. I *don't* think it's an autistic thing, although there may be a fair amount of us that get driven to this state eventually. It's basically a discussion of PTSD, so skip it if you don't want ramblings and analysis on prior misery. I'm having a really bad night that way and can't sleep, so I'm at least trying to make use of it.) There was a time in my life when I was experiencing a whole lot of horrible things, pretty much 24/7, no escape at all, and no escape in sight. And a lot of things happened that I logically thought *should* make me cry. But I couldn't cry at all. I tried to do it, and there was nothing there at all, not even the urge to cry (except as a sense that I really should be crying with the things that were going on). I decided there was something terribly wrong with me for not crying, and I tried to fake crying by rubbing spit on my cheeks and screaming. But I couldn't feel anything and I couldn't cry, and then the attempt to fake crying made me feel even more ashamed of myself, and even more sure that I was basically this rotten monster. The weird thing was that the rest of the time I had hated crying, and during this period I hated not being able to cry. I kind of oscillated between " I am bad because this is a situation that should make people cry and I am not crying " and " I am bad because the reason I am not crying is because this is not a situation that should make people cry and therefore I should not be upset but since I'm upset then I'm bad. " This sort of thing was reinforced by people around me insulting people for both displays of emotion and lack of displays of emotion. I really wish someone had explained PTSD (or any equivalent and useful model) to me at the time in a context I could understand, because I was certainly around people who were at least in theory trained in that kind of thing. At the time I came up with a whole lot of explanations that were rather terrifying. The only problem is I don't know if any explanation would have worked, because I remember someone telling me that I'd been going through some really awful stuff (and comparing it to prisoner-of-war situations) and I kept reacting with something like, " No I haven't. Nothing mind-blowingly awful is going on, it's just me screwing my own life up. I don't even know how you could draw those comparisons, because nothing like that is going on here. " And I wasn't lying -- I had no clue how you could compare the two situations at all, despite the fact that objectively they were similar. My standards were pretty low back then, though -- it took something both horrible and immediate to even register on my awful-meter, and even things like deaths weren't always registering. Which I think is part of why I wasn't crying; my standards for " good " were so low that I don't think most people would accept them at all. This, by the way, relates to the Stockholm syndrome discussion: I sincerely believed they were wonderful people for restraining me face-up, allowing me to eat from time to time, and failing to kill me, and they *treated* these things as privileges. I thought *I* must be a horribly ungrateful person not to enjoy the life they were giving me. Things like being let out with the other patients to do the single-file outdoor walks or go to the cafeteria were things that at that point I had no more conception of doing, and I *knew* it was because I was the " bad " , " disruptive " , " immature " one, and not someone who even deserved to cry because I'd brought everything on myself. But these people were of course wonderful for letting me live, and letting me do anything else they let me do. I think I really cried the least when the worst things were happening, and there's a long stretch where I barely, if ever, cried at all, probably the least I've ever cried in my life. The thing nobody warned me about was that once I got safely out of the system, off the drugs, and away from everything, I'd have nights like tonight where I cry *randomly* about these things, with no warning. The people who had to tell me that weren't trained in psychology, but were other autistic people. (I read something recently about how they're finding that training in psychology doesn't render people much more understanding of other people than the average layperson, and I think I probably could have told them that -- the people who have understood me best and taught me the most about how to live my life have not been professionals, and I've seen and sincerely tried to utilize a lot of professionals.) There was also a weird, seductive feeling of invincibility that was frequent at the time and that I hope I never come near again. I think it was more a desperation thing combined with a " What could you possibly do to me now? " thing, which definitely resulted in the kind of behavior that most people don't want to be around. I'm not sure I want to know what they made of *that*, because it was definitely one of my low points in the scheme of morality (among other things I'd decided I was dreaming the whole thing and could do whatever I wanted and that the people didn't really exist, and you can see where that could go). The weird thing is that the lack of crying thing still happens sometimes. The other night I was looking through a bunch of parent-oriented message boards (I posted what I wrote at the time to another list) and I could feel *nothing*. It was the same thing -- I knew I should feel something at the stuff I was reading, but there was not much there, just kind of a blank, disappointed feeling. And that pretty much continued until tonight. Which is what's going on now. In part that my standards have gone up -- I no longer accept either imprisonment *or* flashbacks as inevitable. Thus, the threat of either one of those things is much scarier to me than when either one, the other, or both were so much part of life that I didn't think about them not being there any more than I used to think about going to the cafeteria or being on " level three star " . And tonight I'm getting pretty freaked out, doing the random crying thing (took me completely by surprise when it happened), and being scared of what could happen. I'm back now where I know rationally that nobody's going to beat down my door and take me anywhere, but a couple hours ago I couldn't convince myself of that at all. (Someone *is* going to knock on my door from a taxicab company in a few hours, though, so I *wish* I could sleep.) I'm hoping this will be brief, because I've got no desire whatsoever for another prolonged period of random mental time-jumping. And I know a small amount of that must have been going on tonight, because I couldn't convince myself earlier that I lived in my own apartment and that nobody was currently watching me or even capable of knowing the emotional state I was in. And I really don't like that in-between state where my mental processes are clearly superimposed from another time but I can still technically see what's going on in this time. (Last time this happened my aide came in and I couldn't talk to her at all because all the misplaced-time-travel thoughts I had were telling me that telling someone what was going on in my head was too risky. And I'm having a little trouble with this email because while I know in my head that it's simply a factual account of how I felt and what I was doing to the best of my recollection, I've still got Lois and Pam in my head telling me that to discuss things like this is a horrible and manipulative thing to do.) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > Hello to all, especially those who've written on this thread, > > I joined this listserv because although I've never been diagnosed (I'm 49), I have a 6 year old daughter who is high-functioning autistic, and I recognize myself in lots of her symptoms. > > Since joining this listserv and reading many of the posts, especially this thread on " Cry Baby " , I feel a very strong need to offer a truely heartfelt and loving virtual hug to all. I mean this in the spirit of empathy, so I hope noone takes this the wrong way. It makes me very sad to realize how much pain has been suffered by so many gentle souls, although I have learned a lot from reading the many posts. Not only have I learned a lot about myself, but because so many of you have been so forthcoming about problems you've faced, I feel I've learned a lot that can help my daughter especially. > > I wish all of you much love and more gentle handling from the world than you've experienced so far. > > Elaine *********** Well, thats a very nice post. Do you know, over a year ago now, the first group i joined, just after being diagnosed, was AS and proud. Anyway, i wrote a few hello's, and felt that i just had to say that i found people's responses much more eloquent in an autistic environment that people's responses in an NT environment. Hope your daughter and you does well, Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 > Ok; *Why did you go out with this guy!!!!!!!!!!* ? In my case, it was largely because he convinced me (I don't know if on purpose or not) that horrible things would happen to me if I didn't, and I didn't know any better. (I also didn't know enough to know that what he was doing was wrong.) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 Anas wrote: >I had a very big problem with crying. There is one piece in the book " Women From Another Planet " by a woman who used the psedonyn " Cry Over an Apple " (COA) due to an incident in elementary school. I don't know how much " diagnostic " value crying has, so all I can offer is that one anecdotal view. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 wrote: >Our species does disgust me at times, and the " no crying " rule is one of >the particularly " sick " ways it does it. I have a strong dislike for crying (my own crying, that is), but it has nothing to do with social fiats or disapproval. It's just that I hate the way crying makes me feel. Oh, and there is the fact that the most common reason for me to cry is not sadness or grief but extreme frustration and meltdown. Not good feelings, and therefore I try to avoid them. Only about once a decade do I cry due to a non-meldown type situation. The last time was during the extreme depression I suffered from (and I do mean I suffered!) while recovering from pneumonia. Crying probably did help a bit at that time. The depression had a solid grounding in what was happening in my body (including reactions to all the drugs that had been pumped into me), and the physiology of crying probably was therapeutic. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2004 Report Share Posted January 4, 2004 wrote: >I continued to cry a lot but had almost a phobia around crying after >awhile because of how many bad things used to go along with it. (My >dad in particular -- in childhood, not recently -- used to do very >overloading things to me to try to get me to stop crying, and used to >yell at me to " quit blubbering " , and the sheer overload of the emotion >and noise sent me into this shrieking terrified state that I have >rarely approached since, so that certainly backfired.) That story reminded me (due to the great contrast) of something from my childhood. I don't remember crying much as a child, but one incident does stick out in my mind. My oldest sister (she's seven years older than I am) and I were walking home together from somewhere. I would have been eight at the time, I guess (but much younger, of course, in most ways). She was describing to me in great detail exactly what the world around us would be like after everyone was killed by nuclear fallout (this was in 1958, and a nuclear exchange seemed all too possible). What she said became so clear to me that I freaked out in sheer terror, took off running, and, when I got home, flung myself into my mother's arms (much to her surprise) sobbing and wailing uncontrollably. Fortunately, my mother, although she was not a touchy-feely kind of person, did love me and did not attempt to discount the degree of my terror. (Come to think of it, she had to comfort me another time during that period. My parents were, atypically, watching a TV show in which someone was killing people with " a poison so deadly a single drop on the skin is fatal. " I immediately freaked out and started sobbing and wailing uncontrollably. My father couldn't understand it. My mother probably couldn't either, but she did comfort me -- and my father didn't feel he needed to interfere or rebuke me.) Maybe I was a " crybaby, " too? I hadn't thought of it that way, since nobody (that I rememeber) ever put that label on me. Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Louise wrote: >My husband has a similar problem with his parents. Hubby says if you no >longer live with them, then all you need to tell them is that need to either >accept you the way you are, with unconditional love, or you will stay away >from them. From what you say (the part of your message I deleted), it sounds like his parents simply do not have the capacity for unconditional love. Some people don't. In fact, I suspect that there is some misunderstanding (in the population in general, I mean, not referring specifically to your in-laws now) about " unconditional. " How much of such love consists in withholding one's opinions? I know a woman who had a terrible time overcoming the results of her mother's constant criticisms. Not only did her mother criticize her all during her growing-up years, she continued the process even when they saw each other very infrequently (by the adult child's choice). The mother would come to visit after not having seen her daughter for two years, and the first words out of the mother's mouth would be, " Your hair looks terrible. " And yet, the mother probably did " love unconditionally " by her own standards. She just didn't know that her love (the love she felt inside) was effectively contradicted by what came out of her mouth. From her POV, all she was doing was helping her daughter " make the most of herself. " She was wrong, as it happens and, as I said, it took at least a decade for the daughter to heal her wounded self-esteem to the point where she wasn't making self-harmful choices in her adult life. Eventually (after another decade or so), the daughter realized/accepted that her mother was never going to give her " proof " /presentation of unconditional love but that such love as her mother was capable of feeling did in fact exist inside the mother. The daughter was able to detach her feelings enough to feel wry compassion for the mother's deficits, and they wwere able to have a " better " relationship (more contact than before, without inflicting damage/pain on the daughter) for the final years of the mother's life. In other cases (and again, I am speaking generally, NOT about your husband, Louis), I suspect some adult children have formed their own picture of what " unconditional love " from a parent should look/feel like, and that mental construct prevents the adult child from seeing that the parent, although not living up to that mental image in the adult child's mind, is living out the parent's own version of " unconditional love. " Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Jane, You make a very good point about how love is felt and how it is " delivered " by a particular person. My mom drives me nuts with her comments (like " your hair is a mess! " I'm 44 years old, I know when my hair is a mess or I know what to do about it) But my friends say that she brags about how smart I am to other people. :-) I have a real hard time not being critical like that of my son, though, in his case he's put on weight and I don't like it. (so what?? I know) But really I do bite my tongue most of the time. (He eats the wrong stuff, restaurant food.)( kvetch) I think it's unreasonable to expect no negative feelings from a parent, like I'd just die if my son became a white suprematist or went into the army. I couldn't love him the same way that I do now, I could manage pity, but it wouldn't be the same love. Your mom sounds like she was great though, Jane. I think she must have done a good job at " unconditional " love or any kind of love. Camille > > From what you say (the part of your message I deleted), it > sounds like his parents simply do not have the capacity for > unconditional love. Some people don't. In fact, I suspect > that there is some misunderstanding (in the population in > general, I mean, not referring specifically to your in-laws > now) about " unconditional. " How much of such love consists > in withholding one's opinions? I know a woman who had a > terrible time overcoming the results of her mother's > constant criticisms. Not only did her mother criticize her > all during her growing-up years, she continued the process > even when they saw each other very infrequently (by the > adult child's choice). The mother would come to visit after > not having seen her daughter for two years, and the first > words out of the mother's mouth would be, " Your hair looks > terrible. " > > And yet, the mother probably did " love unconditionally " > by her own standards. She just didn't know that her love > (the love she felt inside) was effectively contradicted by > what came out of her mouth. From her POV, all she was doing > was helping her daughter " make the most of herself. " She > was wrong, as it happens and, as I said, it took at least > a decade for the daughter to heal her wounded self-esteem > to the point where she wasn't making self-harmful choices > in her adult life. > > Eventually (after another decade or so), the daughter > realized/accepted that her mother was never going to > give her " proof " /presentation of unconditional love but > that such love as her mother was capable of feeling did > in fact exist inside the mother. The daughter was able > to detach her feelings enough to feel wry compassion for > the mother's deficits, and they wwere able to have a > " better " relationship (more contact than before, without > inflicting damage/pain on the daughter) for the final > years of the mother's life. > > In other cases (and again, I am speaking generally, NOT > about your husband, Louis), I suspect some adult children > have formed their own picture of what " unconditional love " > from a parent should look/feel like, and that mental > construct prevents the adult child from seeing that the > parent, although not living up to that mental image in > the adult child's mind, is living out the parent's own > version of " unconditional love. " > > Jane Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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