Trust them for what?
To be themselves?
To live up to your expectations?
To unconditionally accept you?
I have resorted to having support workers. Most others want more of me than I can give, and what little of me there is I have to prioritize for my family, particularly my offspring.
There is never enough of me to go around.
I found my way out of loneliness was to work at things that gave me positive attention, like music, and it's fun to entertain myself with, but even that was hard because I can't hardly handle the attention, but, I'm getting better at it.
I have practiced being social online and doing performance art and even then it's touch and go.
I know how to avoid predatory people now (the hard way, after much being predated on for a long, long time) and if I find people are dishonest I can't actually exist in that relationship. Not anymore, it's too confusing and unsettling. Being autistic, for me, has meant a lifetime of difficult social experiences, so much so, that my own company is preferential, in general, a lot of the time.
But, I've learnt that one must be the kind of person you want others to be towards you and to learn to have reasonable expectations of others. Otherwise you set yourself up for so much disappointment and misery.
But I'm autistic so mostly, I am resigned that it's going to be clunky or sensory-ly overwhelming and tiring, a lot. Even if people like me; it's difficult. Mainly because of a lot of trauma and autism.
Try to find fulfillment in yourself and learn to enjoy your own company, I say, because people are going to be people, they aren't going to be what you want them to be, they will remain themselves, you can only change yourself, not other's. And look into finding social fulfillment from compassionate people, like therapists and support workers. That's what I do.
,