Escaping to deal with loneliness
Princess78
Sea Gull
Joined: 27 Aug 2009
Age: 46
Gender: Female
Posts: 224
Location: Massachusetts, or in a cottage with seven little men
Does anyone here ever use an escape, in order to dear with loneliness? You know, like you lose yourself in the world of a good book or TV show, just to ease your pain? When I was in high school, I had a hard time making friends and finding dates, so on Thursday nights, I always looked forward to watching "Friends." I used to imagine that they were my friends or boyfriends, just so I wouldn't feel lonely. Now, I'm going through the same thing. I've just ended a 5 year relationship with my boyfriend, who also has Asperger's. I wanted things that he wasn't ready for, like having him move in with me, and maybe settling down and having a family. He didn't understand that these things were important to me. So now, I'm losing myself in the world of my new favorite show, "The Big Bang Theory." They are hilarious! "Penny! Penny! Penny!" But seriously, I've been imagining that they are either my friends or boyfriends, just to deal with my relationship ending. I've been imagining that Leonard is my boyfriend. Love him! He has all the qualities I desire in a man: Handsome, smart, funny, and kind. And most of all, someone who loves me as much as he and Penny love each other. My last boyfriend had very limited interests: Bowling and diving. The conversations were very limiting, since bowling isn't that intricate a game, and he couldn't tell me anything about diving, except about the gear. I wanted to know what kind of things he saw when he was down there, but he couldn't, since he didn't do well enough in school to go to college. I want someone more like Leonard, who is educated and well-rounded. I want someone I can have real conversations with, and who can use words like paradigm, and explain to me what it means. I want someone who has various interests, and who can tell me about them. For example, Leonard likes to play chess. There's something I'd want to know about. And I want someone who won't just wear baggy sweats, but who will also dress up for me, and buy me flowers and take me to dinner. I want someone who will have enough sense to attend to me when I have a problem. Whenever I was feeling sad, the best my ex could do was say, "I heard you cry." He didn't know enough to come and comfort me. I had to ask him to hug me. I know that's not his fault, but I do want things that he couldn't offer. So, I'm trying to cope by imagining that I'm with someone who doesn't exist. Has anyone ever done this?
ASPartOfMe
Veteran
Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 35,829
Location: Long Island, New York
Yes I do this. I think it is a quite common technique for ASD and NT people.
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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
Yes, especially at night and even more-so if my whole family is asleep. I will have streams playing in the background of whatever I'm doing on the computer, to stimulate people talking around me in real time. If my 'internet friends' are online then perhaps I'll play games with them as the typing in-game and speaking on Mumble servers helps to make me feel less lonely in the same way a stream would.
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Unapologetically, Norny.
-chronically drunk
I think this is why I like going out on long rides and road tripping - in my case to try to cauterize the aching part. Miles of blacktop can roll by and while it's nicer to have someone to share the experience it's not a requisite. When I get into playing a musical piece on an instrument it can be a Walter Mitty trip for a while where for a moment all those timeless sessions of miming with a broom or a tennis racquet all pay off at a mega concert or crucial recording session, then (ugh) reality sets in and I remember I'm a human jukebox with not nearly enough arms and legs to pull off the performance properly. Maybe the reason I keep the radio on a talk station 24/7 like my 'crazy' grandfather did is just to have other people's voices around me
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Let's go on out and take a moped ride, and all your friends will thing your brain is fried, but you can't live your life too dirty, 'cause in the the end you're born to go 30
ImAnAspie
Veteran
Joined: 15 Oct 2013
Gender: Female
Posts: 7,686
Location: Erra (RA 03 45 12.5 Dec +24 28 02)
Not me, sister! I've been in hospital for the last 4 weeks and had my own room all to myself and it's been WONDERFUL. I never go out of my room. I never want to leave my room and mix with the other patients. I just wish I could have a place of my own back in the real world. A cat would be alright.
This issue came up the other night where someone was saying we get so absorbed in our special interests as a way of distracting from the loneliness. I've always had special interests even before I knew about mixing with other kids and now I'm grown up, I find people an unwelcome interruption to my life. I don't want people. I don't miss people. I prefer my own company. Just the three of us. Me, myself and I!! !
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Your Aspie score: 151 of 200
Your neurotypical (non-autistic) score: 60 of 200
Formally diagnosed in 2007.
Learn the simple joy of being satisfied with little, rather than always wanting more.
i never feel lonely. i do not think that i need anyone else's being to understand me or approve of me. other people's blood runs through only their own veins. my blood is my own and i am happy to be me because it feels good. god loves me. i am happy as well.
other people are outside my domain, and i can never calculate why other people feel as they do.
I don't really have any friends or relationships. I just sit at the computer all day listening to music. I don't feel as lonely when I've got music, especially if it's quite light in a serious way. I join up to a lot of forums, change my mind and come back to them over a year later. I'm a heavy thinker and I feel very conscious of being judged. I tend to go into too much detail and rant, sometimes people call me a troll over it. I'm not very good at dealing with criticism, so that means I stay away a lot and feel discouraged to join in the chatter. Maybe it's an odd, bordering onto dark, sense of humour. It could also be that my somewhat 'rigid' views; if I feel passionately, I will have to keep arguing my point of view or I can't deal with my frustration. I'm too Aspie for my own good, perhaps that's the reason for my lack of friends.
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