meaningless wrote:
Yeah, hearing someone saying my name (especially repeatedly) does make me slightly uneasy, probably because it's something usually done by teachers or parents when they're scolding you so naturally it gives off a bad vibe. What I've noticed also, though, is that I feel uncomfortable calling other people by their own name, even my closest friends. Somehow it feels like a very personal, intimate thing to do. Hard to explain.
Relating it to when a parent or teacher scolds you evokes a memory of my mum shouting at me in a supermarket. Probably every supermarket we ever went to because I would wander off. People often mispronounce my name too. It's Shanti not Shanty, but I never feel any reaction from the mispronounced name. I just give them a disapproving look when they think my name is pronounced like a sailor's jingle.
Also, I rarely call people by their name and it's usually to get their attention. The only time I've called someone by their name when I didn't need to get their attention was when talking to Craig Nicholl's from the Vines who also has AS. I wonder if I actually felt close to him because we were going through the same thing?
Kaybee wrote:
I went into some detail the last time we had a names thread, so it's probably redundant for me to respond here, but names evoke such a reaction in me that I feel compelled to chime in. I'll try not to be too redundant.
Having someone say my name makes me feel somehow vulnerable, so it evokes different responses depending on who says it. Sometimes it feels like an attack. If the wrong person says my name, it can feel aggressive, like an assault or an invasion. Sometimes it simply feels like the person is trying to force intimacy which isn't there (which may or may not feel like a sort of invasion, but will certainly make me uneasy). If the right person says it, however, it feels...wonderful. Intimate. At any rate, saying my name is a sure way to evoke some emotional response in me, whatever it may be. Though I think the full version of my name (rather than the shortened nickname) provokes more of a response when spoken. I'm not sure; haven't tested it.
I'm glad you repeated it. That's exactly how I feel. I struggle to recall a moment where I felt some intimacy but sometimes when being around friends I feel close to I have these intimate feelings that I know I shouldn't have. Sometimes it's towards people I don't even think that way about.