Page 1 of 1 [ 14 posts ] 

natesdad
Emu Egg
Emu Egg

User avatar

Joined: 6 Aug 2008
Gender: Male
Posts: 2

07 Aug 2008, 2:13 am

First, I have to say thanks to my wife (natesmom) for encouraging me to join this site and start posting. I really resisted the idea for a long time, but I finally figured I'd give it a shot and see how it goes.

My wife originally joined because our older son has some AS and HFA traits and may get a Dx soon. Lately she's been talking about me too. We're not convinced that I have AS, though I do have some of the traits. Most notably I have always felt awkward in social situations. I rehearse what I'm going to say, remind myself to make mindless small talk, try to remember to make eye contact and smile, and I sometimes bungle everything anyway and then replay it over and over in my mind at which point I suddenly know exactly what I should have said and done. Rinse and repeat for 33 years. Does this sound familiar to anyone?

(WARNING: If you don't like painfully complex and long-winded analogies, you should probably just stop reading here... Still reading? Don't say I didn't warn you.)

Over the years I've built something on par with a really old computer in my mind to help me with social situations. It's rather elaborate and convoluted, consisting largely of a library of past conversations on punch cards along with complex rules for interaction encoded in mechanical gears. I imagine that NT's have something along the lines of a modern supercomputer to handle this same function effortlessly. Meanwhile my system is held together by duct tape, bailing wire, chewing gum, and of course tube socks. MacGyver would be proud.

Anyway my jury-rigged social framework actually sort of works halfway reliably at least part of the time. Sometimes I even find myself believing that I'm really close to being NT. I played sports in high school and college, taught high school for five years, joined and did well in Toastmasters, and I've done all sorts of other things not typical of someone with AS symptoms. Much of the time I manage to be surprisingly social and I have dozens of friends and hundreds of acquaintances all over the world. It's far from effortless, but I manage somehow and life is pretty good. I tell myself that all that awkwardness crap is finally behind me.

However, the unstable framework periodically and inevitably starts to fall apart as I struggle against another bout with depression. Doubts enter in, thoughts begin to race, the duct tape stops sticking, and pretty soon I'm a mess. Social interaction becomes nearly impossible when my elaborate framework has been reduced to a pile of gears, broken bailing wire, stale chewing gum, and thousands of punch cards blowing in the wind. It's at these times that I'm forced to face the notion that I'm not an NT at all... not even close and never have been. Then I'll torture myself even further by imagining how I should be. I picture a happy and perfect NT version of myself (with a shiny new supercomputer in his head of course) who always knows the right thing to say, excels in social situations, finds unbelievable success in everything he tries, and yeah... lives happily ever after. Meanwhile, the real me just feels more and more inadequate and isolated. I quickly lose interest in any sort of social activity -- even online. I basically go "off the grid" as much as I can and interact with people as little as possible (at work, for example). The racing thoughts make everything difficult and my mental punch cards are scattered for miles and miles. Recovery seems all but impossible.

Yet somehow I manage to slowly and methodically gather most of my punch cards, dust them off, and painstakingly put them back in order. I rebuild the ancient computer with even more duct tape and bailing wire and life goes on, but the prospect of another collapse hangs over my head like the sword of Damocles. After a while I stop looking up all the time, the threat slowly fades, and I start to feel more NT again... until the cycle inevitably repeats.

If you made it this far, thanks for reading. You have amazing patience to put up with my long winded ramblings. I'm not even sure if this will make any sense to anyone else or if anybody will be able to relate, but I suppose I'll find out soon.



Postperson
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jul 2004
Age: 66
Gender: Female
Posts: 4,023
Location: Uz

07 Aug 2008, 2:50 am

yeah, like anyone, you gotta be unsinkable to get thru life. I remember your wife mentioning you. It's quite traumatic, that initial period, took me three years to actually accept I had the condition. I think people underestimate how difficult that period is for the person with the condition because it comes down to accepting yourself as 'defective' in some way, which is like a social 'caste' thing. But it's also a relief too, lots of mixed feelings, lots of remembering and if only stuff. I had thought I was just unusual, like a creative type.

I couldn't say whether you do or don't but you can find that out for yourself in time. Some people come here and decide they don't have it, so that's fine too.

Welcome to Planet Wrong.



Tracker
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 16 Jun 2008
Age: 37
Gender: Male
Posts: 933
Location: Behind your mineral line

07 Aug 2008, 2:54 am

I wouldnt call that a long winded speech, you should see the length of some of my posts. If you think you talk too much, you should read something from Anbuend :P

Anyways, Welcome to Wrong Planet. We might not be able to help you with effective punch cards, but we should be able to help you replace the duct tape with something a bit more resilient.



donkey
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 21 May 2006
Age: 52
Gender: Male
Posts: 1,468
Location: ireland

07 Aug 2008, 4:20 am

natesdad wrote:
First, I have to say thanks to my wife (natesmom) for encouraging me to join this site and start posting. I really resisted the idea for a long time, but I finally figured I'd give it a shot and see how it goes.

My wife originally joined because our older son has some AS and HFA traits and may get a Dx soon. Lately she's been talking about me too. We're not convinced that I have AS, though I do have some of the traits. Most notably I have always felt awkward in social situations. I rehearse what I'm going to say, remind myself to make mindless small talk, try to remember to make eye contact and smile, and I sometimes bungle everything anyway and then replay it over and over in my mind at which point I suddenly know exactly what I should have said and done. Rinse and repeat for 33 years. Does this sound familiar to anyone?


Donkey: yes yes all too familiar. all your post rang some bells for me. it was very interesting but i think you know you have AS.
it took me a long time from diagnosis to acceptance of AS( 3 years) but i got there. eventually and i am better for it, happier within myself.

you said:




(WARNING: If you don't like painfully complex and long-winded analogies, you should probably just stop reading here... Still reading? Don't say I didn't warn you.)

Over the years I've built something on par with a really old computer in my mind to help me with social situations. It's rather elaborate and convoluted, consisting largely of a library of past conversations on punch cards along with complex rules for interaction encoded in mechanical gears. I imagine that NT's have something along the lines of a modern supercomputer to handle this same function effortlessly. Meanwhile my system is held together by duct tape, bailing wire, chewing gum, and of course tube socks. MacGyver would be proud.

Donkey here: your use of analogy is interesting and an AS feature. the delayed echolalia is a term which means we learn things, word phrases and one liners and regurgitate them at a later date, time place or setting, problem is..we may say somethign at a funeral that we heard on a 3 stooges show...the context is always missing and we usually get it wrong.
nt's appear to flow super smooth becuase they can handle giving and taking crap in a conversation. usually As conversations need to fact based and deep or not at all.

you said:

Anyway my jury-rigged social framework actually sort of works halfway reliably at least part of the time. Sometimes I even find myself believing that I'm really close to being NT. I played sports in high school and college, taught high school for five years, joined and did well in Toastmasters, and I've done all sorts of other things not typical of someone with AS symptoms.

donkey: remind yourself that there is nothing typical of someone with AS

you said:
Much of the time I manage to be surprisingly social and I have dozens of friends and hundreds of acquaintances all over the world. It's far from effortless, but I manage somehow and life is pretty good. I tell myself that all that awkwardness crap is finally behind me.

donkey here: let me guess , your going to explain how you can keep this up for a while and then crash?

you said:

However, the unstable framework periodically and inevitably starts to fall apart as I struggle against another bout with depression.


donkey: welcome to AS.

you said:
Doubts enter in, thoughts begin to race, the duct tape stops sticking, and pretty soon I'm a mess. Social interaction becomes nearly impossible when my elaborate framework has been reduced to a pile of gears, broken bailing wire, stale chewing gum, and thousands of punch cards blowing in the wind. It's at these times that I'm forced to face the notion that I'm not an NT at all... not even close and never have been. Then I'll torture myself even further by imagining how I should be. I picture a happy and perfect NT version of myself (with a shiny new supercomputer in his head of course) who always knows the right thing to say, excels in social situations, finds unbelievable success in everything he tries, and yeah... lives happily ever after. Meanwhile, the real me just feels more and more inadequate and isolated. I quickly lose interest in any sort of social activity -- even online. I basically go "off the grid" as much as I can and interact with people as little as possible (at work, for example). The racing thoughts make everything difficult and my mental punch cards are scattered for miles and miles. Recovery seems all but impossible.

donkey here: interesting; you have identified the problem but not the solution.
you try to act NT, in a mistaken belief that this is normal.
then you use the term..."real me" feels inadequate and isolated........this is because the real you is being suppressed in favour of an NT constructed persona. your trying to be normal when normnal for you is AS.
of course the real you is being isolated and ignored....because you are ignoring the "real you" the AS you. the one thats acting to look feel and be NT.....this lasts always a short period followed by a bout of depression and a sense of failure.
Feel free to act AS...be happy with being As and you will find the real you is being accepted and unignored. you will find great closure in this sense of self awareness and acceptance. once this is established you will be able to act "normal" for short periods to get by and avoid the inevitable depression.....i am not a shrink but i have done all of the above and i am better for it.


you said:
Yet somehow I manage to slowly and methodically gather most of my punch cards, dust them off, and painstakingly put them back in order. I rebuild the ancient computer with even more duct tape and bailing wire and life goes on, but the prospect of another collapse hangs over my head like the sword of Damocles. After a while I stop looking up all the time, the threat slowly fades, and I start to feel more NT again... until the cycle inevitably repeats.

If you made it this far, thanks for reading. You have amazing patience to put up with my long winded ramblings. I'm not even sure if this will make any sense to anyone else or if anybody will be able to relate, but I suppose I'll find out soon.



tomboy4good
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 14 Apr 2008
Age: 62
Gender: Female
Posts: 1,379
Location: Irritating people everywhere

07 Aug 2008, 10:17 am

Hi Natesdad & welcome! I have not been diagnosed either, but my daughter has, & for the first time in my life, everything makes sense. Well, to me anyhow! I have gone on for years knowing there was something different (since I can remember), but never having a name for what "it" was. It's a huge relief knowing that there are so many others who have been on a similar strange trip too! LOL

I also have to rehearse social interactions, even ones that occur over the phone. Just know that this is a great place to learn about Autism & Aspergers. I am truly addicted!


_________________
If I do something right, no one remembers. If I do something
wrong, no one forgets.

Aspie Score: 173/200, NT score 31/200: very likely an Aspie
5/18/11: New Aspie test: 72/72
DX: Anxiety plus ADHD/Aspergers: inconclusive


natesdad
Emu Egg
Emu Egg

User avatar

Joined: 6 Aug 2008
Gender: Male
Posts: 2

07 Aug 2008, 10:25 am

Postperson wrote:
I think people underestimate how difficult that period is for the person with the condition because it comes down to accepting yourself as 'defective' in some way, which is like a social 'caste' thing. But it's also a relief too, lots of mixed feelings, lots of remembering and if only stuff. I had thought I was just unusual, like a creative type.

I can definitely relate to this. Acceptance would be like a funeral for the "NT me" in a way and I know I would have lots of mixed emotions.

Creative type, eh? I was labeled as gifted starting very early in school and I've usually attributed my social problems to that. My wife has read quite a bit about the interplay of giftedness and AS and I guess it could be a combination of the two.

-----
I'm looking forward to responding to the rest of you and continuing the discussion, but I have to go to work now. I'm sure you'll all be shocked to learn that I'm a computer programmer. ;)



intense
Toucan
Toucan

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jul 2008
Age: 50
Gender: Male
Posts: 252
Location: UK

07 Aug 2008, 10:31 am

Hi Natesdad, I remember posting on your wife’s thread it's nice to see you here, I was diagnosed just this year and if like me you feel you want to know for sure I would say why not go for your diagnosis, at the very least it stops you wondering "am I or aren't I" then you can decide if you want to tell anyone outside of your family or not.

I chose not to tell except for one close friend and of course everyone here :D

Welcome


_________________
missing in action, but not missed


DW_a_mom
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 22 Feb 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 13,687
Location: Northern California

07 Aug 2008, 12:22 pm

Natesdad, welcome to Wrong Planet.

It seems like many parents first realize they may be AS when their child is diagnosed. My husband and I both went through the self-analysis process while answering questions on forms and researching the conditions for our son (we also have an NT daughter). My husband concluded straight out he was AS, but hasn't given much other thought to it, and I feel I have certain AS characteristics but am mostly NT (basically, not enough AS to get a diagnosis). To us, the genetic theory, involving a large combination of genes, makes inherent sense. We can see the pattern from my father (most likely AS), my mother (very NT), to me (a bit of each), combining with my husband (AS but very high functioning) to create our son (more noticeably AS than anyone prior).

The thing to remember is that no one, NT or AS, "gets it all." Teetering between two worlds, I see and relate to both, and I know this to be true. AS comes with very real gifts that most NTs have no sense of. They aren't really happier, just different. Hopefully remembering that will help you have more comfort embracing whatever identity you decide applies.

PS - I really enjoyed your descriptive writing style. You have a flair for using words to create interesting visuals. With a good measure of humor. Fun to read. I know this was a serious post and you are dealing with some tough things in your life, but your style invites being read. That is a good thing.


_________________
Mom to an amazing young adult AS son, plus an also amazing non-AS daughter. Most likely part of the "Broader Autism Phenotype" (some traits).


Last edited by DW_a_mom on 07 Aug 2008, 5:08 pm, edited 2 times in total.

makuranososhi
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 12 May 2008
Age: 47
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,805
Location: Banned by Alex

07 Aug 2008, 12:55 pm

natesdad wrote:
First, I have to say thanks to my wife (natesmom) for encouraging me to join this site and start posting. I really resisted the idea for a long time, but I finally figured I'd give it a shot and see how it goes.

My wife originally joined because our older son has some AS and HFA traits and may get a Dx soon. Lately she's been talking about me too. We're not convinced that I have AS, though I do have some of the traits. Most notably I have always felt awkward in social situations. I rehearse what I'm going to say, remind myself to make mindless small talk, try to remember to make eye contact and smile, and I sometimes bungle everything anyway and then replay it over and over in my mind at which point I suddenly know exactly what I should have said and done. Rinse and repeat for 33 years. Does this sound familiar to anyone?

(WARNING: If you don't like painfully complex and long-winded analogies, you should probably just stop reading here... Still reading? Don't say I didn't warn you.)

Over the years I've built something on par with a really old computer in my mind to help me with social situations. It's rather elaborate and convoluted, consisting largely of a library of past conversations on punch cards along with complex rules for interaction encoded in mechanical gears. I imagine that NT's have something along the lines of a modern supercomputer to handle this same function effortlessly. Meanwhile my system is held together by duct tape, bailing wire, chewing gum, and of course tube socks. MacGyver would be proud.

Anyway my jury-rigged social framework actually sort of works halfway reliably at least part of the time. Sometimes I even find myself believing that I'm really close to being NT. I played sports in high school and college, taught high school for five years, joined and did well in Toastmasters, and I've done all sorts of other things not typical of someone with AS symptoms. Much of the time I manage to be surprisingly social and I have dozens of friends and hundreds of acquaintances all over the world. It's far from effortless, but I manage somehow and life is pretty good. I tell myself that all that awkwardness crap is finally behind me.

However, the unstable framework periodically and inevitably starts to fall apart as I struggle against another bout with depression. Doubts enter in, thoughts begin to race, the duct tape stops sticking, and pretty soon I'm a mess. Social interaction becomes nearly impossible when my elaborate framework has been reduced to a pile of gears, broken bailing wire, stale chewing gum, and thousands of punch cards blowing in the wind. It's at these times that I'm forced to face the notion that I'm not an NT at all... not even close and never have been. Then I'll torture myself even further by imagining how I should be. I picture a happy and perfect NT version of myself (with a shiny new supercomputer in his head of course) who always knows the right thing to say, excels in social situations, finds unbelievable success in everything he tries, and yeah... lives happily ever after. Meanwhile, the real me just feels more and more inadequate and isolated. I quickly lose interest in any sort of social activity -- even online. I basically go "off the grid" as much as I can and interact with people as little as possible (at work, for example). The racing thoughts make everything difficult and my mental punch cards are scattered for miles and miles. Recovery seems all but impossible.

Yet somehow I manage to slowly and methodically gather most of my punch cards, dust them off, and painstakingly put them back in order. I rebuild the ancient computer with even more duct tape and bailing wire and life goes on, but the prospect of another collapse hangs over my head like the sword of Damocles. After a while I stop looking up all the time, the threat slowly fades, and I start to feel more NT again... until the cycle inevitably repeats.

If you made it this far, thanks for reading. You have amazing patience to put up with my long winded ramblings. I'm not even sure if this will make any sense to anyone else or if anybody will be able to relate, but I suppose I'll find out soon.


It is a strikingly familiar refrain... learned about it when my son was dx'd HFA, and while reading about AS discovered myself. Do not have a concrete official diagnosis yet, in large part because each doctor I interview admits to knowing nothing about ASDs in adults. The computer analogy is a good one; for me, my flowchart gets bent and all out of whack... nothing connects. Currently in one of those rebuilding stages myself. There are other conditions to consider, but it sounds like you've made a good first step coming here. Welcome, and look forward to talking more. Don't worry about verbosity - that was a short entry compared to some of the threads that grow here.


M.


_________________
My thanks to all the wonderful members here; I will miss the opportunity to continue to learn and work with you.

For those who seek an alternative, it is coming.

So long, and thanks for all the fish!


sonny1471
Sea Gull
Sea Gull

User avatar

Joined: 19 Sep 2007
Age: 53
Gender: Male
Posts: 213

07 Aug 2008, 2:13 pm

Thanks for joining natesdad! You'll feel better for it in the long run one way or another. I came upon my journey in a similar way since my nephew was diagnosed about 5 years ago. Many of the things he's gone through reminded me and my family waaay too much of me as a child.

I was diagnosed as a child with hyperactivity and eventually put in the "gifted" class to help with my insatiable need for knowledge. I couldn't have received a diagnosis of AS when I was a kid (in the 70's) so I struggled through my problems for years without any answers.

Even if you find out that you don't have AS, you'll be better for it in the long run because you'll have gained knowledge along the way to help you and your family.



StrawberryJam
Pileated woodpecker
Pileated woodpecker

User avatar

Joined: 31 Jul 2008
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 196
Location: Mt Sterling

07 Aug 2008, 4:57 pm

what ive told some older people who are recently either being diagnosed with AS or thinking they may have AS, is that if it wasnt making things bad before you found out, it shouldnt make anything much worse afterwards. you're the same as you were, just with a knewfound knowledge of what may have caused some things that went wrong.

i was diagnosed with AS at the age of 3, but wasnt explained any of it till 8, and i didnt feel any different then, and dont feel any different now. yeah, i was an outcast in school, but thats how it always was and i never bothered to change it. i embraced it, more like. anything that could make me more different, the better. the weirder your appearance, the more normal your weird behavior seems. how else would you expect a girl with blue and pink hair to act? makes strange behavior seem normal, so i dont have to try to act normal. though i do need to work on not speaking with an angry tone of voice, as it makes my boyfriend think im pissed at him when im just pointing out something hes doing wrong...


_________________
Mother always says, "Honorrr before gain."
Who's on a beef again?


Postperson
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 9 Jul 2004
Age: 66
Gender: Female
Posts: 4,023
Location: Uz

07 Aug 2008, 6:30 pm

natesdad wrote:
I can definitely relate to this. Acceptance would be like a funeral for the "NT me" in a way and I know I would have lots of mixed emotions.


Yeah I forgot about that one, some people compare it to grief and loss/dying type experiences and emotions. I think it was for me too, but it's been over 10 years now, so...I forgot.



natesmom
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 May 2008
Gender: Female
Posts: 631

07 Aug 2008, 6:55 pm

DW_a_mom wrote:
Natesdad, welcome to Wrong Planet.
PS - I really enjoyed your descriptive writing style. You have a flair for using words to create interesting visuals. With a good measure of humor. Fun to read. I know this was a serious post and you are dealing with some tough things in your life, but your style invites being read. That is a good thing.



Trying to be a silent bystander but I have to say that I have been telling him the same thing about his writing for years. He has a gift in writing.



StrawberryJam
Pileated woodpecker
Pileated woodpecker

User avatar

Joined: 31 Jul 2008
Age: 32
Gender: Female
Posts: 196
Location: Mt Sterling

08 Aug 2008, 2:11 am

indeed his writing is very good :o i read the whole thing


_________________
Mother always says, "Honorrr before gain."
Who's on a beef again?