Willard wrote:
Lene wrote:
the things or actions I focus on often are wrong, but that I give them too much importance in the scale of things, and that I would be happier if I learnt to shrug them off .
But
the Devil's in the details - "oh, it's only
one thermal tile, don't worry about it. The shuttle has thousands of those."
Dammit, these little things
are important. They're f**king
crucial.
I'm not sure if you're being sarcastic, but yeah, it does feel a bit like that
. It's as if small actions are premonitions of a much larger problem and need to be fixed right away or the actions will get worse further down the line. It's a bit like that saying 'nip it in the bud'.
The thing is, when I explain that the action upsets me, it seems too trivial to the other person to take it seriously. And I suppose I should just sit tight and wait and see if the actions do get worse later on, or if this time was just a once off. But it's like, to continue using your analogy, sitting in the cockpit of the shuttle crossing your fingers and hoping nothing else falls off.
Edit; just a thought, but I wonder if people with aspergesr are more likely to act like this because of the way we learn social skills. We don't 'pick them up on the job' as much as NTs, but learn them as a foreign language. Would this make us more likely to see associations in behaviour where others don't? Or perhaps we haven't seen enough behaviours so we try to correlate all actions to the limited behaviours we have observed?