Faking acting "normal" has become a default thing for me in social interactions, yes, but only after years of suffering from the responses to my "real" self when I was a child, teenager and in my early twenties. It was somewhere in my twenties that I realized I was going to have to make a conscious effort to "be normal" -- which for me was being different from my natural self -- in order to simply fit in, survive and blend into the world of work and socializing as I was expected to. I'm 52 and there wasn't even a diagnosis in my youth, so I was never expected to be anything but normal even though it was clear to everyone that I wasn't.
When I was as young as 11 or 12, I was by then so agonized by my very clear deficits in social skills that I got every self-help book from the library that I could, even old fashioned stuff like Norman Vincent Peale. Because I wanted to understand myself, and I wanted to improve what I felt was broken in me. I felt like a defective item and I wanted to find out how to fix myself. I also became obsessed with psychology, psychiatry, and body language. Because again, I was desperately striving to understand myself as well as "normal" people, and to try to "fix" myself.
I bought books on human behavior, and body language. I mean, I actually studied body language from books on the psychology of it all, like a little autodidact! It was only because of that stuff -- and watching people on TV -- that I had a learning curve with an "OHHHHHH, so that's what I'm supposed to do/be like."
It's pretty sad. I still fail miserably because no matter how well I thinking I'm faking it, people can still tell there's something "off" about me. I do better if I'm well rested and if the people are ones I feel comfortable around. I do worse if they're not and I'm tired or already over-saturated with the strain of social interaction.
And that's another thing -- all of this faking is a strain. It wears me out. Although doing it has become automatic, the actual mechanics of it is a constantly conscious effort. But I can't just not do it because I believe that my life would go even less smoothly. Particularly since I don't have a formal diagnosis to fall back on if I'm just letting myself "all hang out" and someone has an issue with it or is confused, and I have to explain anything about my "real" behavior.
I think that for some people who have been long-diagnosed or were diagnosed as a child, it may be easier -- for some people -- to drop all pretense and let the cards fall where they may. Not least because at least they KNOW what's "wrong" with them and have the back-up, if you will, of a real reason, a formally diagnosed condition that is the real reason behind the way they are, the responses they have, the sensory issues, the social strain or awkwardness. I have nothing formal except a "highly likely" from both a clinical social worker and the Cambridge screening tests, but that isn't enough to go 'splaining with...
So I fake. Because I have to hold down earning a living and getting by in life and it's scary to do that without at least trying to kind-sorta fit in.
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