justkillingtime wrote:
When I talk to some people about social skills problems, they tell me that everyone does that and the solution is to not let it bother me. I feel they are making my problems small and that is not a solution.
I have had that experience several times and it is insulting for people to say that, because they are essentially accusing you of blowing an insignificant problem out of proportion and using it as an excuse. I've been on this planet half a century and I can state with complete confidence that the issues Autistic people deal with may resemble minor hurdles that NT people experience, but they are not the same, or "everyone" would have had the same problems functioning on a day-to-day basis that I have had and clearly that is not the case.
Neurotypicals may know what "the jitters" are like or "stage fright" - but they do not live with that level of anxiety on a daily basis. When you drive yourself to work and become so sick with anxiety that you can't get out of your car, you are not experiencing something that "
everyone" goes through. If you are bullied your entire life because others figure out that when they verbally assault you, you shut down and become unable to respond, you are not going through an experience that happens to "
everyone." Being annoyed to distraction by someone turning the TV up too loud in no way resembles experiencing physical pain from certain sounds, as though someone had just tasered you. I hatefully resent having my handicaps trivialized as though they were meaningless.
As far as being self-critical, JKT, keep in mind that most of your social shortcomings are due to the hardwiring in your brain. Your gray matter is simply hooked up a bit different than most and that is never going to change. It doesn't mean you can't learn to work around that and improve your social functioning, you most certainly CAN, but there's no textbook for it, you just grow into it over time. Which means, you're going to get thrown and humiliated over and over again, but you will will only learn to stay in the saddle if you keep getting back on that horse
(I can't believe WP doesn't have a cowboy emoticon).