• Welcome to Autism Forums, a friendly forum to discuss Aspergers Syndrome, Autism, High Functioning Autism and related conditions.

    Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:
    • Reply to discussions and create your own threads.
    • Our modern chat room. No add-ons or extensions required, just login and start chatting!
    • Private Member only forums for more serious discussions that you may wish to not have guests or search engines access to.
    • Your very own blog. Write about anything you like on your own individual blog.

    We hope to see you as a part of our community soon! Please also check us out @ https://www.twitter.com/aspiescentral

Being Autistic, My Loneliness May Not Look Like Yours, But It’s Just As Valid

AGXStarseed

Well-Known Member
(Not written by me)

What if parties full of other people make you feel more lonely than actually being alone?


This week, the National Autistic Society suggested that autistic people are four times more likely to be lonely than the general public. This figure is striking but not all that surprising to me and many other autistic people who deal with this everyday of our lives – just see the comments in response to the story on social media. It’s time we talk about our - often unique - experiences of loneliness. Only by talking can we make sure autism isn’t forgotten in the national debate on loneliness and the Government’s upcoming strategy for tackling the issue.

Being autistic, social events consisting of small talk and - even worse - networking are normally akin to being trapped in a lift with big spiders or your ex’s new, much less awkward girlfriend.

It was my friend’s birthday last week. He is the best type of person for an autistic woman like me to be friends with: he’s an actor and can spot a fake smile in a million-mile radius and he is so straightforward it makes my communication puzzle so much easier. This year I finally found the confidence to go to a party he hosts each year. When I arrived he hugged me and said he knows I love him now as I actually left the house for him.

He gets it. He’s gay but why oh why can’t I find a straight man that gets it too? Oh that’s right, because I’d have to leave the house to find him.

What if parties full of other people make you feel more lonely than actually being alone?

Past events have also shown that, upon finding a nice man, they seem to not be as thrilled as I am at the prospect of, what I call ‘being alone together’, by week two. To me that’s heaven. Being alone together consists of being in the same room, not talking, yet the silence being comfortable.

Some people show companions they care by phoning them, making friends with their friends or committing valuable chunks of their free time to hanging out with them. In my case, it’s different – and not least because I need recovery time, alone, to recharge from simply working or being a parent. If I have ever left the house for you, on your terms, please view that as a genuine act of love. Please also know, when I’ve stayed home, this is not to be misunderstood as being anti-social, a lack of empathy or a lack of interest in others. It’s quite the contrary.

I feel everything, all at once without being able to process and therefore understand it quick enough. How can you make small talk when you have the biggest questions imploding inside your mind, yet you’re required to talk about the weather and their job roles (both very readily available on Google)? How can you let down your guarded poker face, disguising the fact that social small talk feels like an invitation to an archaeological dig with the most fascinating discoveries to be made yet you are only permitted to sweep the first layer of dust and leave?

It makes sense then perhaps, that just as I experience socialising differently, I also experience loneliness differently too. Does that mean my loneliness is less valid?

It’s often the case that at the very moment there is a logistical, ‘special interest’-based, purpose to be social that I become motivated and, to a degree, utterly blinded. A notable example of this being last year when I was invited to the Jo Cox Loneliness Commission at Parliament. I was attending in my role of a disability advocate with Scope. Parliament being one of my absolute favourite places on the entire globe, the objectives are clear, and my excitement was high.

Jo Cox famously said that we have “more in common than that which divides us” and her hope for more understanding and social cohesion is something that inspires so many of us. Just by being invited to be a part of the commission meant I felt included and a useful part of society. I went home with the appreciation that you do not have to be old to be lonely, you can be lonely from childhood. I started questioning whether I had ever truly not felt a degree of isolation? I was on stage acting at an early age. Was this purely because it was one of the best ways for me to have friends, a script being a rare time I was equipped with the right words to say?

In my role of a British Autism Advocate I wear many hats - speaking at universities around the UK, designing new empowering ‘autistic girl power’ t-shirts, acting, writing, helping women in court cases and so much more. Busy, busy, always wanting to take on more.

What if, just like in childhood, my work has become my friend? What if over-achieving has become my spouse? What if I spent all evening writing this very blog simply because that’s what my brand of loneliness looks like?

How It Feels is ongoing blogs project, which aims to shine a light on people’s stories, covering subjects where voices are rarely heard. If you want to get involved, please email [email protected]


Source: Being Autistic, My Loneliness May Not Look Like Yours, But It’s Just As Valid
 
I agree, I do experience loneliness differently to other people. For other people, loneliness might mean that they don't have many friends, perhaps because they moved to a new area. For me, it is because I fail to connect with people and I am always on the outside looking in. Lonely in a crowd. Watching TV.
 
speaking at universities around the UK, designing new empowering ‘autistic girl power’ t-shirts, acting, writing, helping women in court cases and so much more

Sounds like she's the female British autism advocate.

Are we supposed to wear the t-shirts?
Are they a big seller?
Are they given out free? Ie someone's charitable contributions has paid.

Would I wear a shirt saying '''boy power"?
Empowering and patronising at the same time.
How about wearing t shirts saying '''''lonely together"
Would that cure it?
We .could all wear them at the party.

Or maybe..
M.ale A.utistic D.eviant.
 
I don't really like the idea of t-shirts. That being said, I do agree with the statement that our feeling of isolation when surrounded by people is often discredited or discarded.

Most of my friends still don't realize that when I say I don't want to be at their house party, I'm not being shy or insecure, and I'm not depressed (mostly). I just don't want to be in a social situation with a multitude of people. The more people around me, the less I feel like myself, unless I drink copious amounts of alcohol, which opens a whole different can of worms.
 
I don't like the idea of T-shirts either, I would never wear such a T-shirt. It's condescending.
 
I get the "room full of people and still be lonely" thing.

I feel lonelier at parties than I do alone, because when I am alone I know I'm good company with someone who understands and accepts me as I am and doesn't judge me.

At a party, I may get along with one or two people - but they can't stick with just me the whole time so I'm left to fend for myself, and most of those people either avoid me (often after I've attempted to be friendly or conversational) or I'm invisible.
 
I get the "room full of people and still be lonely" thing.

I feel lonelier at parties than I do alone, because when I am alone I know I'm good company with someone who understands and accepts me as I am and doesn't judge me.

At a party, I may get along with one or two people - but they can't stick with just me the whole time so I'm left to fend for myself, and most of those people either avoid me (often after I've attempted to be friendly or conversational) or I'm invisible.

Interesting. @ksheehan88 I remember before you said that you are partnered and have kids. How does your loneliness interact with your experiences with such constant companions, if i can ask ?
 

New Threads

Top Bottom