Slithytoves
Oblique Strategist
Thanks for all of the awesome responses! I took an unexpected mental health break from AC after I posted this thread (I'm fine, just a lot going on at once). To avoid spending the whole morning responding to every post, I'm just going to hit a couple a big issues covered here.
I think Spiller is right, that ASDs amp up the anxiety considerably. Everybody has a degree of social anxiety when mixing people from different aspects of life, but our wiring can take the stress a step beyond. Like Aspergirl4hire said, it entails mixing facades, which in our case can be particularly tailored -- it's hard to wear two masks at once without suffocating.
I've talked to my therapist about this. Since he doesn't specialize in or know much about ASDs, the best he could offer was something akin to what Beverly suggested; try to "put [my] mind in a neutral point of view," un-boxing everybody for the moment. Beverly said it -- it's much easier said than done. I got some particularly good advice from one of my sisters, though. She said what I needed to put things in perspective was a realistic and attainable goal. My choice: All that has to happen is that at the end of the visit, all parties should be able to look at each other and say, "Yeah, I'd like to see _____ again." That should be easy to accomplish. All are easy people to like.
Judge nailed it, re: "social unpredictability". I know what to expect from all parties, just not together. That little unknown leaves room for irrational panic.
I have given a lot of thought to what Karin said about "feeling responsible for the mix to work out to everyone's satisfaction," and things NTgirl4276 said. I'd considered this stuff before, but their posts made me examine it more closely. I do know it's up to each individual to do their own part to make that happen. And really, I know everyone will do their job well. Back to Aspergirl4hire's "mixing facades" idea, though, I think the biggest obstacle I've got is role conflict. Juggling my several familial roles has presented its own challenges over the years, and though discovering this winter that I have AS has helped me work that out better, I haven't had much opportunity to road test my new understanding because I live so far from my clan. Now I'm adding the role of partner/wife on top of that wobbly configuration -- one I'm not very practiced at mixing with the others -- and I'm not sure how that will look. Awkward, I bet. People regress when they're around family. It's inevitable. Meanwhile, my partner self is very progressive. I guess what it comes down to is that I don't want to look like either an outcast or a child to my new husband, and I don't want to look like an awkward partner to my family, especially since my romantic history has been pretty unorthodox and not very successful by any traditional metric. I don't want him to feel like the husband of the black sheep when he's surrounded by the rest of the flock. And it's also hovering close to my consciousness that how I look when I'm around Harrison will be incorporated into their impression of him.
I think too much. That's what it comes down to. I envy people who can just do things and not ruminate about them incessantly ahead of time. It burns a lot of energy.
I think Spiller is right, that ASDs amp up the anxiety considerably. Everybody has a degree of social anxiety when mixing people from different aspects of life, but our wiring can take the stress a step beyond. Like Aspergirl4hire said, it entails mixing facades, which in our case can be particularly tailored -- it's hard to wear two masks at once without suffocating.
I've talked to my therapist about this. Since he doesn't specialize in or know much about ASDs, the best he could offer was something akin to what Beverly suggested; try to "put [my] mind in a neutral point of view," un-boxing everybody for the moment. Beverly said it -- it's much easier said than done. I got some particularly good advice from one of my sisters, though. She said what I needed to put things in perspective was a realistic and attainable goal. My choice: All that has to happen is that at the end of the visit, all parties should be able to look at each other and say, "Yeah, I'd like to see _____ again." That should be easy to accomplish. All are easy people to like.
Judge nailed it, re: "social unpredictability". I know what to expect from all parties, just not together. That little unknown leaves room for irrational panic.
I have given a lot of thought to what Karin said about "feeling responsible for the mix to work out to everyone's satisfaction," and things NTgirl4276 said. I'd considered this stuff before, but their posts made me examine it more closely. I do know it's up to each individual to do their own part to make that happen. And really, I know everyone will do their job well. Back to Aspergirl4hire's "mixing facades" idea, though, I think the biggest obstacle I've got is role conflict. Juggling my several familial roles has presented its own challenges over the years, and though discovering this winter that I have AS has helped me work that out better, I haven't had much opportunity to road test my new understanding because I live so far from my clan. Now I'm adding the role of partner/wife on top of that wobbly configuration -- one I'm not very practiced at mixing with the others -- and I'm not sure how that will look. Awkward, I bet. People regress when they're around family. It's inevitable. Meanwhile, my partner self is very progressive. I guess what it comes down to is that I don't want to look like either an outcast or a child to my new husband, and I don't want to look like an awkward partner to my family, especially since my romantic history has been pretty unorthodox and not very successful by any traditional metric. I don't want him to feel like the husband of the black sheep when he's surrounded by the rest of the flock. And it's also hovering close to my consciousness that how I look when I'm around Harrison will be incorporated into their impression of him.
I think too much. That's what it comes down to. I envy people who can just do things and not ruminate about them incessantly ahead of time. It burns a lot of energy.