Greetings!
The topic of this post is a question about assessing interaction with others, but it's also my first real post here & a little background is in order. I'll try to keep it short:
Probably not a unique experience around here, as a youth I would arrive at elementary school, enter the special needs classroom where I was placed with much more deeply challenged children, be counted by the teacher, and then walk down the street to the high school for my education, returning to the special needs class to finish the day. I made that walk alone, though in a school with <400 students that's not particularly surprising. I could go on but the core of it really is what many of you probably can relate to: everyone around me regarded me as having a bad enough handicap that they felt I belonged with the children who require full-time care, and in contrast "gifted" enough that if there was an academic award up for grabs I took it home fairly by my own merit without difficulty.
Very confusing for me and somehow I managed to adapt by being oblivious to the "elephant in the room" - i.e. I perceived myself as "normal" and merely more adept with information than others - despite what should have been obvious: if I'm consistently grouped with folks who have special needs, I must be demonstrating a need for that type of care and segregation.
That's it for background, now more than a decade out of school and more-or-less successful as an adult - I've been on autopilot this whole time, get job go to work, find girlfriend and wreck everything without knowing why, start over. Repeat. Begin to visit 2 psychologists and a therapist after some shopping around and bad experiences (with unsympathetic or coldly prescription-pushing doctors) and achieve liberating validation with a diagnosis.
Suddenly my history makes more sense, I have less to hate myself for, I'm happier, I no longer fixate on how to kill myself in front of a trauma ward so that my organs could be harvested & benefit others.
BUT... here's the meat of this post:
Looking back I can't tell which friendships, opportunities and interactions were genuine (I thought they all were at the time) and which were given to me out of pity. Some were obviously pity for the odd 'tarded kid... of course nobody flat out told me. From your experiences, what do you think the best strategies are for understanding and accepting pity from others in the past? I'm not angry at any of them for deceiving me, they had the best intentions in mind. It's just insulting when I don't feel like I deserve it, and it also means they didn't actually *like* me, they only felt a social obligation to help me. I'm at a loss to deal with any of this but it's a mental itch that needs scratching and I don't even know where to begin.. past, present, future, nothing. Any tips?
Cheers