Mostly on-topic and slightly off-topic rant ahead:
Prolonged social interaction not involving my subjects of interest becomes extremely stressful after about a day or so. One day consisting of hours of social interaction needs at least 3 to 4 days to 'recover'(usually more), otherwise I become quite erratic when around people again for periods of time more than an hour or so. School wasn't a problem in this area because I could focus on something besides the people in the room, but the more quitodian friendships and social interactions are awkward to engage in. Fronts would help with this, but I still wasn't fooling anyone. It just made me more 'weird', or a 'clown'.
Being around other people too long with the focus on subjects outside of my interests greatly exacerbates those personality disorder traits that I have.
I sometimes like laying in bed for 20+ hours straight, or with a book, or a computer, after being around other people for too long. I need to be back to my thoughts again. Around and around they go... if only I could better put those thoughts to practice in the real world I might do something with myself and not be 'the loser living in my parents' basement' according to my former friend(or at the very least, support myself, which I'm sure I'm fully capable of). Just have to keep trying, because one day I'll actually do something satisfying and something where the results make me happy.
It is stressful and confusing. The one close friendship I had deteriorated over the last half decade or so, because I was the 'ungrateful bastard', the 'recluse', the 'p****', a 'girl', and the 'lazy, arrogant weirdo'. "You need to get out more." "Be more normal." "Be a man and finish these beers." "Shut up." "That's not what I meant you f*****g ret*d."(after me taking a comment literally), "I'm not interested in that. Shut up about it already."/"You're full of BS."/"You're stupid."(after explaining an idea or a concept) "Why do you have to critiscize me all the time?"(after explaining the flaws in the person's idea and not the person) "You're a f*****g wuss."(after not wanting to go around vandalizing other people's property)
Now I'm again alone in real life with regard to friends(I left on my own because he was beating his girlfriend, threatening me when I'd say something about it, and calling me various insulting names), but I do have friendly acquaintences from college I speak to online and don't have to be alone, but I just don't know how to start over again without 'burning another bridge' so to speak. For those who really know who their friends are, be glad, because I don't know how to determine that very well and never did. Just because someone says they're your friend doesn't make it true. There's a lot of good people out there and good to be found in everyone(including my former friend), but finding these things is where things become difficult. People are confusing, you never know how they're going to react to what you say, why they say the things they do, or what they're thinking and feeling...
I suppose I should find people with my interests, but they are very, very hard to find offline, and most of them are much older than I am, have families, ect. and don't have the time to dedicate themselves to a project spanning months or a very long, in-depth exchange of information. If you others have friends your age that closely share your interests, you are very, very lucky. Being 'social' would be fun as opposed to confusing and stressful, nevermind how educational it could actually be.
Ideas/Concepts > Useless banter/Partying
I tried to live the opposite way just to 'fit in' with my friend and his circle of friends, but it just won't work for me. Being the "arrogant know-it-all" in a group of 'normal' people is anything but pleasant.