spankyandthegang wrote:
When focused on your areas of interest, managing a career, and your reactions to interactions with NT's, do you find it overwhelming sometimes to deal with too many people as friends?
Yes. At the moment all my friends are online and live in other parts of the country or other countries. I love it that way. I can go visit them once a year or so, and throw myself into the intensity of it for a few days, and then be able to escape back home and have plenty of time to recover. I've been going out with the people from work once every couple weeks, but that has nothing whatsoever to do with friendship, even though it appears to. It's sheer calculation in order to be viewed as one of their team.
When I was 17 I had three good friends, one of whom was in-person, and I met someone who could very well have become a fourth, except that I couldn't keep up... even though all it would have required was a written letter once every couple months. I still regret losing contact with her, but it really wasn't feasible.
spankyandthegang wrote:
Do you find the expectations of NT's who do not know you have Asperger's to be overwhelming?
Not overwhelming, but that's because I've streamlined my life and trained my reactions... not sure how to explain. At work my boss says about our current project, "It's not a sprint, it's a marathon, so pace yourselves." I'm taking the same approach to dealing with people's expectations.
spankyandthegang wrote:
Does just trying to cope with all of this want to make you withdraw and establish boundaries?
Yes, no question. I used to try to match my boundaries to where other people seemed to draw them, but I was overwhelmed a lot and in bad shape. So now I've gotten really paranoid and careful with boundaries.