Jinks wrote:
I have difficulties with phonecalls too, and my phobia over making them has in the past caused me problems due to avoiding important ones. You need to figure out the cause behind the anxiety. Anxiety doesn't appear from nowhere, but rather from experiencing that the thing you are anxious about is difficult, stressful, etc. for you. Autistic people can have difficulty with phonecalls for various reasons, including the lack of visual cues to help interpret the social interaction, making it more difficult than speaking face to face with someone. In my case, I have difficulty with verbal processing, so phonecalls are very hard work because I have to concentrate so hard. I am more likely to make mistakes and need longer to process the communication than I do in face to face speech, and I worry about the other person judging me and thinking I'm an idiot because I stammer and am not able to carry the conversation very well.
Once you know the cause behind your anxiety, you can work on resolving it and finding workarounds to the issue. Where autism is concerned just doing lots of it or trying to remove the anxiety without knowing the cause is unlikely to help you, because it's probably an aspect of your disability which is underlying the problem.
Me exactly, between verbal processing issues and phone anxiety from childhood memories of my mom call ing my teacher and getting beat afterward,,, I hate phones.. it was part of the issues in a last job as i would procrastinate on important phone calls that had to be made.When i do make calls i have to have total silence and no distractions,, to be able to focus totally on the call.
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