ezbzbfcg2 wrote:
^It would be great to hear of some social mistakes people kept making but then learned from. Anyone want to give an example? I personally find it hard not to be myself, but I realize to some extent life can be far worse in having to deal with people who don't understand us. They can be be devious and possibly dangerous.
Some of my social skills I actually learnt naturally along with my peers in early childhood. But other social skills I learnt after my peers did, and I learnt the hard way.
When I was a child I lacked some self-awareness and would go around thinking that people don't judge you because they don't notice what you're doing. It took me a long while to actually figure out that people
do notice things and that being weird can cause people to bully you or laugh at you or not want to be your friend, etc.
So I think my social difficulties stemmed around lacking self-awareness and being slightly behind my peers socially. It took a few embarrassing situations to haunt me for the rest of my life in order for me to get where I am today.
I'm not speaking for anyone else here, but as a high-functioning and mild Aspie, I feel like social skills are like driving a car; you have to learn how to drive a car but once you know how it just becomes natural to you. So now most of my social skills are as natural as anyone else's.
Some basic social skills I did develop normally, from birth or very early childhood, such as making eye contact (occured from newborn age) and talking and having a conversation (occured around the normal age).
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Female