cmate wrote:
Agree, I think we become more aware, and for me it also becomes less acceptable - I really regret my temper outbursts after the fact, versus when I was young, I really had little regret.
Yes, in that, IMO, most Aspies are genuinely very kind/well-mannered & gentle. In reality, I don't do anything "wrong" & I'm fortunate in that I don't have those behavioral problems much. But, about what you wrote, once in high school, I bit my teacher's arm bloody. I felt badly but, if the situation were repeated, I'd likely do it again. I did like her BUT what she did accidentally (which I took seriously at the time): She was "play-teasing" with me (not in a mean way) and she extended her arm as if she was to hit me. That I bit her was not impulsive but reasoned; self-defense on my part. I can be somewhat like an animal in this way. Of course, I know now to never bite!
To confess, I did this fairly recently & very sorry. At University another grad student whom I now like very much, picked up my small stuffed animal I had on the desk (I was a TA at that time, office hours). Almost instinctively, I said "NO. Mine" and started to cry hard. I guess this was really immature, but I just did not know. I thought she'd tease me or be upset - she was not at all. In fact, quite the opposite. Maybe that's why I do like her. But in general I don't do that sort of thing, obviously.
About OP, clearly Samara1991 has not done anything "wrong" but now feels the effects more strongly, in all respects. Samara1991, you asked if it gets better, or how to make it better. I don't know, but I imagine it will get better - maybe one of those situational "humps?" Or like cmate wrote, somewhat like growing pains (apologies if I mis-quoted in paraphrase, cmate, but I do know what you mean).
When my senses HURT, then everything else is harder as a consequence.