Kate4432kate4432 wrote:
I dont know if it this way for others on the spectrum, but my outward "emotional appearance" is so "flat", that no one really noticed when I fell off the deep end.
This is the single aspect of this discussion that I identify with the most deeply. The fact that intense suffering can be (or seem to be) totally undetectable. Whether it be a feature of an ASD mind or not, I absolutely hate all theatrics. I find emotion as a deliberate display very repulsive and am certainly not capable of making a drawn out narrative show of my feelings or ongoing problems.
The deep and frustrating paradox now seems to me to be that in order to be perceived as sincere, to be treated socially as sincere or just
real, emotion tends to have to be insincerely expressed through theatre - that what is transparent drama (even if it is under-played, to even add to the dramatic effect) is often taken as a show of deeper, presumably more sincere feeling.
The more depressed I become, the less sympathetic those around me seem to be: As the days get harder, my 'affect' becomes flatter, and outward flatness seems conventionally to be taken as hostility of some kind, even at its most depressive.
As aggravating as the social side of things is, I still feel that my state of mind is ultimately a matter between me and the universe, and no number of positive social interactions per whatever-time would fundamentally change things. It is, though, possible that I'm fooling myself by thinking that.
I've always found, perhaps against some past principles or other, that having someone in a service-type position try to help me gives me an enormous sense of gratitude when I finally manage to see them. More so than sympathy from someone
not paid to do it. It's a funny thing. But I've always felt like a fraud trying to explain difficulties to a doctor. The usual script-based responses to mental problems just still give me the feeling like it's something experimental - that it's not the doctor's
real job.
My own experience with medication was not convincing. I felt that minimising drink and computer use had an overall more anti-depressant effect than the tablets in the end. Then again, I tend to think of emotion as moving like weather, and so to know what helps, whether it
really helps, is almost impossible some times.