ToughDiamond wrote:
Consciously I feel no reluctance to make eye contact, but for some reason I can't seem to get into the habit of it - I simply forget to bother. So somebody visits me, and I'll typically glance at a point near to them in the room, then I'll think "dammit, I was supposed to look at their eyes and smile." I'm slightly better when in conversation, but again I can easily forget.
But my awareness of my own reluctance to do things might not be all that strong. I've often noticed that if I think I may have an aversion to doing a particular thing, I'll kind of steel myself and do it anyway, as if to prove that I'm not scared of it. So there may be some unconscious aversion going on, for all I know.
I like the "damaged amygdala" theory......it offers an explanation for why I forget to make eye contact - I'm using conscious will and effort to do something that should be running intuitively via the amygdala. I wonder if brains scans of autistic people show anything odd in that region?
It took me a while to see this emotional need from the outside. To me, communicating was the main objective - *the verbal*- and out in space was O.K. by me. But I'd find people keeping in lockstep with my wandering head to lock eye gaze.
It's funny I didn't notice this too much until it was brought to my attention. Later, I have went through stages to where I did, but then it wasn't an " acknowledgement" of the "other." This is something I later detected, an unconscious communication of being "one,"that was missing. I do it "better" now by coupling it with a conscious thought, "we are on the same page." It works well as I detect an 'at ease' with this new approach.