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The only time I feel alone is when im with other people
True. I lost faith connecting with new people at the moment. I do think the issue is I don't connect with people in the location is am living at. Didn't have these issues in my home province. Maybe things be better when I move though I am focusing a life about myself.If you always do what you've always done you'll only get what you've already got!
For Pete'smoke: The Lankavatara Sutra is a thing I read many years ago. It literally revolutionised my mind and has provided me with a glimpse beyond. That for me will be for the greatest party ever imagined, the moment of unity when all sentient life is liberated from suffering. Wishing us all great happiness, peace and justice. To relinquish all power over another. Equality. Home. Considering I had no idea what my mind was at the time but I have stumbled upon many kind souls since then. So I offer this link to you FYI.I've had very few friends in my life, partly because I find it difficult to know when someone likes me, partly because I'm fairly misanthropic - I don't like or trust that many people. Too many bad experiences. Also because I hate smalltalk, and shared interests, to me, don't indicate friendship - I want to get deep and meaningful with people, which apparently is thought of as weird. The friends I've had, I've been very close to; it's usually been quite an intense experience.
I think Aspies quite often like to be on our own, but we also crave friendship... but it has to be the right kind of friendship, with people that we can understand and that can understand us. These people seem to be pretty difficult to find!
I'm really lucky to have a girlfriend who understands - in fact, she's a semi-Aspie herself! I think it might be true that Aspies only need one friend, and for adults, that friend is often their partner. BUT - I do still wish I had one or two other people that I could really talk to on a deep level, to get a different perspective on things, to learn from them. Occasionally I do meet someone I think it could work with, but then I get so excited/enthusiastic/emotional about it that they get scared off!
I don't know your age so I have to frame my answer in terms of the different stages of loneliness I experienced over my 70+ years living with ASD. In my pre-teen years I was extremely lonely. I could not relate to anyone at school. I was an only-child. And I lived in a neighborhood that did not have a lot of children my age. When I was in my teens, I was fortunate enough to find a few good friends who were in sync with my interests (we were nerds before that term came into use.) That lasted until my college years which were a nightmare of loneliness. I worked my way through college; first as a cook (long story) in a hotel restaurant where I got room and board plus some extra spending money as part of my wages. Since I had a full college schedule, all my spare time was spent working at the restaurant or studying. Because I was constantly busy I did not mind the loneliness so much. That lasted one semester. By the second semester I had saved enough money to move into the college dorm. I was lucky enough to get paired with a roommate who had a compatible disposition. We became close friends. I also got a PT job writing news stories for a local radio station and was mentored in radio news writing by an older gentleman who appreciated my attention to detail and ability to describe complex events in short, easy-to-follow, prose. During my last semester at college, I was able to earn enough money from my radio job--work I came to love--so that I was able to leave the restaurant job. And my roommate decided to transfer to another college so I got an apartment off campus. Although I had gone though my entire "college experience" without attending any wild parties or making lifelong friends I did adjust to being alone and became more aware of the special skills and talent I possessed. That not only helped me cope with the loneliness but also gave me some tools to use in my future careers. I could share more about the next three stages of my life but I want to leave you with a message of hope:Regardless of what label they put on you remember that YOU alone are the master of your attitude and personality. It will all be OK in the end so if it is not OK it can't be the end.Is it hard for anyone else out there to find, establish or maintain friendships??? I'm aaaaalways alone, except when I go to church and I always feel depressed.
I didn't know how to maintain relationships outside of school or after that and college. For some reason I really struggle with the idea of seeing these people outside of the areas we meet. I'm going to learn how to do that soon though, I've made a good couple of friends at a peer group of mine and when I'm able to properly drive and have less anxiety because of it I'm going to see these people outside of the group. I don't want to do back to being lonely and only having Facebook as a line of connection between friends of mine who are drifting off. It does hurt me that I was never asked to go out by my old friends, I guess that tells me that they didn't necessarily value my friendship over other people they knew. But I know too that I need to do work on keeping their friendships going, so that's what I'm going to do.
The protocol for transitioning between "school friends" to "outside-of-school friends" is so difficult for me. I've yet to master it.
It's nice to hear other people also have this exact problem. I don't know what it's about, maybe it's something to do with difficulty with structure?
Yeah, it is hard for me to establish or maintain friendships. If it wasn't for my family, I'd be totally alone, except when I go to church as well.Is it hard for anyone else out there to find, establish or maintain friendships??? I'm aaaaalways alone, except when I go to church and I always feel depressed.
To me age would be the dominant factor comparing the two. Where the exposures of adulthood are more prone to breaking up those "outside-of-school" contacts. Moving, new job, marriage, etc..
Things that sadly are more likely to be beyond our control to maintain or nurture good friendships.
Yes. But for me a lot of my old friends still live locally and the communication just isn't there.
Duh!, you say you feel nothing yet you are using the language of emotional landscapes to describe your position. You perceive you don't when you do! You keep ignoring it as emotion while you schedule other matters as prioritisation but that too exists because of the need to be different from. This is a skill-set, not a criticism. Exploring the possibilities will always exist because of what we are made from a hugely overengineered biological information processing engine. Where do you look or listen or feel it's operation? Looking tells you how it's constructed, listening tells you how it's running, feeling tells you everything at once but it takes a lot of practice plus guidance to know much of what it is about.even before i was diagnosed i keep people at arms length, for the most part i beleave most people have liked me do to my energetic get it done nature and, perma happy look i put on to deter from the fact i really dont feel anything. mind you i have allays been the bunt of humor do to being trusting and as they would say gullible. but all in all i can count one one had how meany people i have called friend in my life time. (Ps. also take into account at 24 iv still yet to find a girl.)
Any thoughts on why that communication is "no longer there" ? Do you think it reflects on you personally, or perhaps other reasons like too busy, family, etc. ?
Is it hard for anyone else out there to find, establish or maintain friendships??? I'm aaaaalways alone, except when I go to church and I always feel depressed.
Dylan,The protocol for transitioning between "school friends" to "outside-of-school friends" is so difficult for me. I've yet to master it.
Yes, it is extremely difficult to do this as an Aspie. I was diagnosed late at the age of 46, with a long history of isolation and lack of follow-through of career choices.
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