njones0100 wrote:
Joe90 wrote:
I don't have outbursts in public, and I don't have them with friends either. If I was in a shop with really loud music on, I know how to just cope with it, and if it annoys me too much then I'll go out. But I was with an NT friend once in a shop with loud music, and even she complained to me about how loud the music was.
Loud noises don't set me off though. I don't have outbursts from sensory overload. I have them from emotion overload (too many negative emotions at once). Outbursts are horrible because I get so angry that I don't know where to put myself or what to do with myself. I am just in a sheer panic, because usually my outbursts are triggered off by things that are beyond my control, like when it snows, because I hate snow. Well, there wouldn't be any point in having outbursts over something what I can control, because then I can do something about it then, won't I?
So, would you say that your meltdowns are brought on by a feeling of helplessness?
The only occasions that I've had anything remotely close to what I would describe as a meltdown occurred when I was much younger and in arguments where I was made to feel completely helpless. I would have tears streaming and be unable to control my crying.
Sort of, but I become very argumentative and abusive when I'm having one. And yes, they are feelings of helplessness. I don't become non-verbal either, I am completely verbal and I don't stop being verbal, I rant on and on and on and my mum's like ''SHUT UP!!'' which makes me even more mad, although she does have every right to yell that because I must sound really annoying.
I'm a bit like Stephen Quire, a teenage boy who is filmed a lot on Youtube when he's angry. I behave just like him, except I don't smash objects.
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