Autistic Emotions
Dear_one
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Joined: 2 Feb 2008
Age: 76
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,721
Location: Where the Great Plains meet the Northern Pines
My AS mother dealt with emotions by putting me in quarantine until I calmed down. Like many men, I had to use a check list as an adult to begin identifying my emotions. I first noticed anger because my car went faster when I was thinking of certain things. Then I realized that most people were controlled by emotions, and I'd been wasting my time giving them the benefit of the doubt on having some rational process. Then I had a crisis that unleashed crippling emotions, which I'm slowly gaining perspective and control over. Unfortunately, people have less patience for an adult than a child trying to learn about the interplay of emotion and social interaction.
Xatrix26 brought up a very good point, there isn't very much discussion or none at all about what we display versus what we feel internally. I know that I feel placid emotionally 95% of the time and on rare occasion I'll have an upswing in an emotional state internally but nothing will show externally unless I make a conscious effort to have it shown, such as laughing at a joke or expressing my disgust at a negative event. 1% of the time I have an emotional outburst that I don't have time to control or contemplate and it manifests physically. Sometimes it will be an angry outburst or a meltdown.
I would be curious to see more people talk about the internal vs external emotional states.
_________________
I'm not a doctor but I play one on t.v.
I would be curious to see more people talk about the internal vs external emotional states.
Indeed sir thank-you!
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*** High Functioning Autism - Asperger's Syndrome ***
ADHD, OCD, and PTSD.
Keep calm and stim away.
There seems to be a huge disconnect with what an ASD actually feels inside and what an ASD actually expresses visually for all the world to see. I've seen some here write that they feel no emotions at all and yet others believe that we have extremely strong emotions that are quite intense. But none have really stated whether it's what they actually feel inside as opposed to what they actually express for all to see.
Now I would agree with some that certain emotional stimuli causes me to express nothing at all and yet inside of me there is a raging torrent that I am unsure of what to do with as far as expressing myself. And yet other emotional stimuli causes me to react immediately and this mirrors what I actually feel inside which is again, the raging emotional torrent.
This appears to be part of our emotional struggle as ASDs with regards to emotional states of what we actually express and what we actually feel inside. Sometimes we react immediately and sometimes we react at the wrong times with uncontrollable intensity. This aspect of our re-active and inactive emotional states may hold the key to many other problems that we face on a daily basis.
Exactly what I keep trying to say but probably don't get across the right way.
ASPartOfMe
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Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 35,907
Location: Long Island, New York
Mine are often delayed. Often I am just feeling them when most others have moved on.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
I find that I have plenty of strong emotions, particularly when people experience similar negative events to what I've experienced in the past i.e. the passing of a spouse. In those cases, I can feel very distinct and strong emotions and express sincere sympathy to that person. When I experience a negative event that is new and haven't experienced before, if somebody asks me if I'm okay or how I'm feeling the honest would be that I don't know. It takes me time to process my emotions in such instances. For instance, I didn't have contact with my dad for 20 years and found out through the mail that he had passed a year prior. This was six months ago, and I'm still trying to understand my feelings concerning this.
Even if I do experience strong emotions or sympathy concerning something, I know it doesn't show on my face, but I can ACT and show expressions that NTs would understand to be the expression of emotion. However, if I don't act NT, I'll still feel the emotion, but it won't show on my face or in the inflection of my voice.
I think it's pretty common for autistics to feel strong emotions, but sometimes be thrown a loop that they simply can't make heads of tails of until they take time to think about it and process it.
I'm very disconnected from my emotions. I think I have them plenty, but they usually exist over there, and I have to try and work them out. I'm trying to get better at reading cues.
For example, I can distinguish different types of "good feelings" and "bad feelings" because I will tend to flick my fingers for high energy emotions (excitement, worry), but not for low-energy ones (contentment, sadness).
My ex has commented on how non-emotional I am in reactions to things. He has been a little hurt by how not-feeling-based I was as a partner, but some things he just noted were odd, in comparison to how he'd expect most people to react more emotionally than practically.
CockneyRebel
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Joined: 17 Jul 2004
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Posts: 116,864
Location: In my little Olympic World of peace and love
I would be curious to see more people talk about the internal vs external emotional states.
Very good post. Describes me also. I am angry or dissatisfied a lot and if not angry am generally very stable, rather apathetic, really. I'm generally frustrated by the world, but this hardly ever shows externally. I don't even have the meltdowns these days. I don't like emotional displays, at all.
I would be curious to see more people talk about the internal vs external emotional states.
Excellent summary
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When I lose an obsession, I feel lost until I find another.
Aspie score: 155 of 200
NT score: 49 of 200
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