Greentea wrote:
Hartz, that's how I feel too. The big irony is that I used to NEVER leave a PM unanswered because I sympathized with other Aspies who, like myself, face so much rejection in our everyday lives, only for them to ignore MY pm!!
And yes, I've had people ask me to start an online friendship, only to disappear once I'd warmed up to the idea.
I don't know why people do this, haven't the faintest clue, except that maybe they write me when they're having a bout of loneliness and forget all about me the next day as the flow and ebb of life distracts them. But even so, even if you find someone's reply to your PM utterly appalling, unless it was heinous why ignore it? You're doing YOURSELF a disservice because you're contributing to people in gral. becoming jaded. What goes around, keeps going around and around until one day it comes around to you. I, for one, hereby stop being Greentea the one that you could take for granted would answer all your PMs thoughtfully. As Hertz says, I get enough rejection and mind-games in the real world as it is.
I can sympathise with you on that. I've PM'd a few people and some PM'd me, and sometimes the correspondence ensued and other times it just stopped. I hope it wasn't any fault on my part, but I think keeping a PM chat going is difficult. For one, the different time zones, and the main reason I think is - once the initial motivating point (which brought about the PM-ing in the first place) has been discussed, it's difficult to keep the contact alive, probably because people might not know what to say. I know this can truly be said about me. What should I say now? Or should I say anything at all?
I know that you reply because you do sympathise with the other person, but I don't think that ending any contact is a show of rejection. Because of my rejection in the real world and my low self esteem I would probably think the same way. You're a good person, don't punish yourself by thinking negatively.