Page 3 of 5 [ 74 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1, 2, 3, 4, 5  Next


Do you have meltdowns?
Yes! very big meltdowns that can be dangerous 19%  19%  [ 22 ]
Yes, a big show but can be controlled with interventions 11%  11%  [ 13 ]
yes, loud, and emotional but people dont get hurt 36%  36%  [ 41 ]
yes, just crying though, nothing bad 22%  22%  [ 25 ]
I have not had a meltdown in my adult life 6%  6%  [ 7 ]
I have never had a meltdown 5%  5%  [ 6 ]
Total votes : 114

Outrider
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 Feb 2014
Age: 26
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,007
Location: Australia

07 Mar 2016, 12:12 am

I would count that as a crime, by technicality.

What I mean by crime is simply I technically committed verbal assault and, I'm not sure how the laws may differ where you are, but yelling and cursing someone off loudly would count here, especially since in Australia a male yelling towards a woman is much worse.

And yeah, in a hotel lobby you could have risked arrest, or being taken away by security or rooms cancelled, etc.

My meltdown happened at a shopping centre/restaurant just off the highway on the way back from a fun day out at the amusement park. Fun other than my step-dad constantly being on my back, of course.

At least I'm not alone. And I didn't do anything to my property, just yelled at Mum then my sat down next to me step-dad and told him off for how he was speaking to me before. And then Mum came to me and had to talk to (in a more quiet and calm voice) tell me off.

Anyway, what's saddest of all is, it appears most of everyone's meltdowns here are caused by the very last people that should - friends and family.

Teachers, bullies, fellow students/co-workers, or random strangers might make sense, but to me, family/friends doesn't.

Just goes to show how non-understanding some of our familie's can be sometimes.

I think, if it was people who aren't our friends or family that would almost always cause our meltdowns, we would all better overcome our violent meltdowns or take it out on others and instead learn to have self-inflicting meltdowns or leaving the area, as once responsibility catches up to us we'd learn better self-control.

In short, if it was just teachers, bullies and co-workers and such, once we become 18 and get more severe charges for committing a potential crime, we'd have learnt self-control, as these are the people more likely to report us and get us into trouble with the law than family/friends.

Just my thoughts...



Edna3362
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 29 Oct 2011
Gender: Female
Posts: 12,700
Location: ᜆᜄᜎᜓᜄ᜔

07 Mar 2016, 1:18 am

At this present, I could only go as far as the 3rd option.
Most at the time, I can feel when there's something building up. Which I have to pinpoint and know the reason why before I get to get overwhelmed by it.
Rare times a few slips past through it, which it could only pass off as frustration, but almost all of it never made it to a fullblown meltdown.

It takes a lot of wisdom and patience to control it without feeling repressed or end up being frustrated.
But all the same ended up with me relying on body language than speech when my mind is busy possessing myself.


If I'm going to talk about my childhood and teenage years, it's a different story.


_________________
Gained Number Post Count (1).
Lose Time (n).

Lose more time here - Updates at least once a week.


Joe90
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 23 Feb 2010
Gender: Female
Posts: 26,492
Location: UK

07 Mar 2016, 4:50 pm

Before I went on antidepressants my meltdowns were:
-shouting and swearing
-excessive crying
-verbal abuse at family
-arguing
-hitting my head and face
-slamming and kicking doors

Since I've been taking meds the rage meltdowns have calmed down, although I still get panic attacks that are:
-excessive crying
-irregular breathing
-chest pains
-feeling cold and tired
-headache

Panic attacks aren't nearly as bad as rage meltdowns I used to get. During panic attacks I don't hit myself, swear, yell abuse, kick or slam doors, shout or argue.


_________________
Female


Unfortunate_Aspie_
Veteran
Veteran

Joined: 7 Sep 2015
Age: 32
Posts: 579
Location: On the Edge of...

07 Mar 2016, 9:21 pm

zkydz wrote:
My meltdowns are loud, language skills go down the drain, so the language is raw and can be offensive. Nobody around me to help turn the situation in a proactive manner. So, it runs its course and then I leave the premises. Usually leave by storming off. Anything to get away from people and things.

I don't like them as they are getting to be worse and more frequent. That's why I was able to put patterns together and realize it's not just 'getting angry'. Stressful situations, the type of things that overwhelm me. For instance, in the home, it's inconsistencies. Those things that seem to not bother people, but drive me bonkers. That old stupid thing:
"Where is my model I am looking for?"
"I don't know, I haven't been in there."
"No, this has been moved. Where is the car model?"
"I no see car model."
"How did you not see a car model if you haven't been in here?" (This is when it starts to go balongas on me.)
"Well, I water plant. I no see you model."
"Wait, you said you weren't in here. Why did you lie to me?"
"I no lie..."

That sort of thing. That actually happened and, there was a lot more after that because it just kept mounting with the obfuscations. But, that was the trigger that day. Inconsistencies drive me nutso.

What I don't understand though, is that to me it was a series of blatant lies, so what the hell. Caught each one and each one made it worse. then the thing that sent me over the top was this one:
"Why I lie to you? This so small."
"You did lie, that's the point. If you lie about small things, you will lie about anything. Not just to cover your ass on big things. Anything."

Then when I try to tell people (Not the shrinks) about how this affects me and why, they all look at me as if I'm stupid and say, "That so not important. Why you worry that?"

"BECAUSE IT'S LIES!! ! ! !"

Am I crazy about this? I can't deal with the inconsistencies anymore.

But, inconsistencies are a major trigger, and is not proportionate to the severity of the lies. They're lies to me and I can't seem to see it any other way. All lies are lies to me.

OMG I used to be exactly like this, but then I stopped caring, some things I can lie about and others I can't. I belive that if you lie to me- you don't deserve my honesty and you don't deserve anything beyond the superficial from me you don't deserve to know me (extreme I know..). So I, in turn, lie to them- I lie about myself and just lie about little s**t like that (although I have a horrible memory so sometimes I forget and people think I'm lying and... I'm not :lol: ).
However, I remember when I told an aspie friend I lie they were like heart broken and it kind of shocked me out of lying (I don't want to hurt people) ... but then I get wrapped up in work which is a constant "don't say this" "pretend this didn't happen" "You didn't really know that now did you?" and I just can't keep up any true honesty- well not if I want to stay employed... if I did I would go certifiably insane. Honesty is a nice ideal- that no one follows.
Like when I was a kind I used to say my mom lied because she would say something like: "Every single time I looked back you had your hand in the cookie jar" and I would say "but the third to last time I was drink milk and the second to last time I wasn't even eating a cookie!! You LIED!!" and she would say: "Stop being a snotty nosed brat" and as I got older "You little b***h don't be such a smart ass" < - I thought I was making a case about an ultimate truth SHE was talking in NT "exaggerations" and phantic social language, which if I had known she was using her language to make a point instead of actually saying things in her words. I would have understood, but I thought the meaning laid in her actually words and it did not ....
it's like when you point to something and your dog smells your hand, and you are like: NO not my hand THE THING I'M POINTING TO!"
I don't know how anyone can trust anyone... it just seems like a circle jerk of dishonesty, pulling the wool over someone else's eyes, trickery, politicking, and manipulating people. I just can't keep up.... and in that light- and in light of all of that- my "true" aspie sense of veracity and all that other moralistic s**t (even if sometimes it can be as simple as remembering all the knife twists and deception is just too complicated to remember). Sometimes it just impossible to truly live by.... :oops:

For me meltdown material is not dishonesty (I don't expect ANYONE to be honest or not-self-serving in anyway although this kind of breaks my heart). What gets me is someone manipulating me juuuuust to f**k with me just for the sole purpose of trying to mess me up. Manipulating just to manipulate.
When I find out someone has essentially "bullied me" as an adult.... wow, I go red. Even for a small offense (seemingly to others) I go pretty ballistic... I go nut-so, as they say.
It's semi-controllable though for example, since I'm a female I usually only react violently when men do this to me, because literally no one cares if I am violent to a guy. Fair? not really, but when everyone thinks you are inconsequentially weak they don't care if you are violent because "can't do any harm she's just a chick- she can't do anything :roll: " nothing physical that you do matters.



zkydz
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Nov 2015
Age: 63
Posts: 3,215
Location: USA

07 Mar 2016, 9:49 pm

You talked about your mother. I can relate. My mother and stepfather were always on my ass about telling the truth. Then if I was with my mother, she would buy things, hide them and tell me not to say anything. Then my stepfather would do the same thing to me.

But, to do what they requested, would be a lie. To do as they requested would mean lying to them each, individually. And, I would get my ass torn up if caught doing what they asked, either way. I mean black and blue marks from above the knee to just above the small of my back. Things that were legal in the '60s is considered child abuse. What my step father did was child abuse by even the standards of the '60s and '70s.

I cannot reconcile lies.

Outside, my meltdowns happen when overloaded and can't escape the stimuli. Too much coming over time and at any given time it just hits the point that I can't make sense of things, I just explode.

What's funny is this: The loud and foul language and stuff is just bluster to let it all out. The time to worry is when I get quiet. When I'm in that quiet space and angry, that's when the real crap is about to hit the fan.


_________________
Diagnosed April 14, 2016
ASD Level 1 without intellectual impairments.

RAADS-R -- 213.3
FQ -- 18.7
EQ -- 13
Aspie Quiz -- 186 out of 200
AQ: 42
AQ-10: 8.8


animalcrackers
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Feb 2011
Gender: Male
Posts: 2,207
Location: Somewhere

07 Mar 2016, 10:08 pm

Mine fall between the first and third option. (Although the only person who ever gets hurt is me and since I've never actually broken any bones or required stitches, I would not, personally, call them "dangerous".....I hope most others would agree with me on that, but who knows.)

Thankfully they happen less and less often as I get older -- part of this, I think, is just natural development/maturity. The rest is: medication + changes in my environment + support/training to learn prevention and harm reduction strategies + practice/effort.


_________________
"Coming back to where you started is not the same as never leaving." -- Terry Pratchett, A Hat Full of Sky

Love transcends all.


zkydz
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Nov 2015
Age: 63
Posts: 3,215
Location: USA

07 Mar 2016, 10:38 pm

I call mine dangerous, not for the harm I do to others or myself, but for the fact that they happen at places that can cause alarm and create a much worse situation. Or, can make matters much worse, even after things have calmed down.

Walk off jobs or yell at coworkers, lose income.

You try to visit your daughter, supervised no less, and people think you're a raving lunatic.

You can answer questions quickly because you know your logic, your routine, why you do everything because it's part of my particular make up, memory and recall because of my constant looping of days I live. But, because you can do that, people have always said things like, "Well, you just have an answer for everything don't you."
And, then when you get caught off guard when people go 'off script' you look like a complete idiot and they find a way to flip that on you. Even had both things happen in court, back to back and in both instances, the ability to answer or not answer was met with the same derision.

So, mine have done very, very real damage.


_________________
Diagnosed April 14, 2016
ASD Level 1 without intellectual impairments.

RAADS-R -- 213.3
FQ -- 18.7
EQ -- 13
Aspie Quiz -- 186 out of 200
AQ: 42
AQ-10: 8.8


mikeman7918
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Mar 2016
Age: 26
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,929
Location: Utah, USA

08 Mar 2016, 12:46 am

My meltdowns usually involve crying and putting effort into not damaging things.


_________________
Also known as MarsMatter.

Diagnosed with Asperger's, ADD, and Generalized Anxiety Disorder in 2004.
In denial that it was a problem until early 2016.

Deviant Art


zkydz
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Nov 2015
Age: 63
Posts: 3,215
Location: USA

08 Mar 2016, 1:17 am

mikeman7918 wrote:
My meltdowns usually involve crying and putting effort into not damaging things.

I so wish I could cry. I have not cried since October 28, 1998. I so wish I could do that. I am envious.


_________________
Diagnosed April 14, 2016
ASD Level 1 without intellectual impairments.

RAADS-R -- 213.3
FQ -- 18.7
EQ -- 13
Aspie Quiz -- 186 out of 200
AQ: 42
AQ-10: 8.8


slw1990
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jan 2014
Age: 34
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,406

08 Mar 2016, 1:32 am

zkydz wrote:
Am I crazy about this? I can't deal with the inconsistencies anymore.

But, inconsistencies are a major trigger, and is not proportionate to the severity of the lies. They're lies to me and I can't seem to see it any other way. All lies are lies to me.


I'm like this too. I mean, with most people I don't really expect them to be very honest so it doesn't really phase me most of the time. What really gets me upset though when someone closer to me says things that don't add up when they seemed genuine before, even if it's something really minor. It also really gets to me when people who I felt like I could trust act unstable and flaky towards me when they didn't before.



zkydz
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 7 Nov 2015
Age: 63
Posts: 3,215
Location: USA

08 Mar 2016, 1:58 am

The thing that gets me is I can't figure the severity on the fly. I can think about it and some time later, I will have realized the insignificance or, significance, of the real situation.

But, it's the loss of consistency and being thrown because things don't add up. At the moment it hits me, it's all the same.

I've got to find a way to curtail what's happening.


_________________
Diagnosed April 14, 2016
ASD Level 1 without intellectual impairments.

RAADS-R -- 213.3
FQ -- 18.7
EQ -- 13
Aspie Quiz -- 186 out of 200
AQ: 42
AQ-10: 8.8


beelove
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

Joined: 10 Aug 2020
Age: 24
Posts: 25
Location: USA

12 Aug 2020, 5:29 pm

My parents are almost always the trigger. They tear into my soul and character until I stop the conversation with my words or start to shutdown and then meltdown. They don’t stop even when I tell them what’s happening.
I’ll run up to my room and self harm. Usually by choking and punching myself. There’s so much emotional distress going on in my body and I need physical pain and exertion to release it. The longer I postpone the screaming, crying, or hurting, the stronger it becomes and longer it lasts. They leave me feeling empty, exhausted, and embarrassed that I just acted like an “out of hand child”. I’ve never had a meltdown in front of someone. I never tell people. I reached out to someone once during and they were quick to end the call as soon as possible. I feel so alone and dramatic during triggered self harm rampages.
It’s so hard living in an environment where no matter how much you communicate, it falls on ears that only see you as a target. Sometimes it’s down right scary having to rely on people who only want to see you fall and be as miserable as they are. How can you say you love someone and hurt them so bad with no remorse, no empathy, no guilt, only endless pride and antics.



Romofan
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 Jul 2020
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Posts: 602
Location: Carcosa, Texas

12 Aug 2020, 5:43 pm

Sometimes it’s down right scary having to rely on people who only want to see you fall and be as miserable as they are.


For me, the worst part was having to return to my oppressive house because I was in no condition to support myself. When I flunked out of the prestige college (that nobody thought I could get into, and refused to pay for) and had to drag my tail back to my (basement) room, I think my misery-making family got some satisfaction from that.

All of their undermining played a role in the crippling depression that made finishing impossible.

Thank God those days are long gone, and I'm not thinking about that horrible place all of the time.


_________________
"We see the extent to which our pursuit of pleasure has been limited in large part by a vocabulary foisted upon us"


Joe90
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 23 Feb 2010
Gender: Female
Posts: 26,492
Location: UK

12 Aug 2020, 6:00 pm

I had worse meltdowns before I went on Sertraline. My meltdowns (better known as 'outbursts') involved:-

Screaming
Crying
Swearing
Hitting myself in the face or head
Slamming and kicking doors
Shouting
Arguing

These were typically triggered by:-

A loved one saying the 'wrong' thing to me
Overwhelming emotions such as depression or jealousy
Being triggered if I'm already in a bad mood by someone saying the 'wrong' thing to me
Some change to routine
Self-hatred and low self-esteem issues
Feeling helpless or powerless

Nothing could stop these outbursts once they started. I just had to let it all out and just didn't know what else to do. Afterwards I felt guilty and ashamed for upsetting my family.

Being on Sertraline has helped me be in control of outbursts and learn how to let more things go over my head rather than exploding. Obviously I still have my moments, but I'm still easier to live with than I was before. That is why I'm scared to come off Sertraline. I don't want to start losing control of myself like I used to.


_________________
Female


beelove
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

Joined: 10 Aug 2020
Age: 24
Posts: 25
Location: USA

12 Aug 2020, 11:02 pm

Romofan wrote:
Sometimes it’s down right scary having to rely on people who only want to see you fall and be as miserable as they are.


For me, the worst part was having to return to my oppressive house because I was in no condition to support myself. When I flunked out of the prestige college (that nobody thought I could get into, and refused to pay for) and had to drag my tail back to my (basement) room, I think my misery-making family got some satisfaction from that.

All of their undermining played a role in the crippling depression that made finishing impossible.

Thank God those days are long gone, and I'm not thinking about that horrible place all of the time.


Quarantine limits my ability to escape their oppression. I cant wait for the days where I’m triggered by life and not family. I can’t wait for the days where I can reflect on how difficult things were and how strong I was. Trying my best daily to better myself for my own happiness regardless.



whatacrazyride
Tufted Titmouse
Tufted Titmouse

Joined: 20 Jul 2020
Age: 37
Gender: Male
Posts: 30
Location: United States

13 Aug 2020, 12:12 am

This may seem weird, but I voted "Yes, and dangerous" and "never had one in my adult life". In many ways, they are both true. Outside of a hospital, I have not had a meltdown in my adult life; I had them as a child, but as an adult, I was able to "escape" before it got out of hand. When I have a way out, I will never meltdown.....ever. When I was a child, I didn't always have a way out, so I would meltdown. I have had numerous in a hospital setting because I'm there a lot, often for months at a time. The following text will be in spoiler form because of possible triggers

Unfortunately, I am restrained a lot in the hospital, sometimes for months without reprieve, and I have nervous breakdowns/meltdowns that can be scary, and last for an hour or longer. Hospital restraints bring a lot of painful memories from my childhood. Even this last hospital stay, I spent a large majority of it being restrained to a bed. It's horrible and I might write a post detailing these things.
. Being in a hospital often means that you can't easily escape the things that are triggering you, especially when you are dealing with the things described in the spoiler text. Being sick + in pain + having ASD + no ability to recharge/escape = bad combination in hospital.

I hate having meltdowns; they are embarrassing. I had several in my four and half month hospital stay earlier this year. I even had one on my birthday this year (18 April)! Yikes. I'm back in the hospital now (Aug 7), but no meltdown yet.

My nephews have them often, and it can be scary, especially when there is nothing you can do to stop it. I just let them meltdown, only intervening if they are going to harm someone, or themselves (or destroy property). When I was about to meltdown, I would build up to it, giving warning to people to stay away. Don't press them; don't mess with them. They are embarrassed too.