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MrMacPhisto
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02 Apr 2018, 1:16 am

Something I have observed about myself throughout the years.

I get days occasionally where I would go into a shell, end up not wanting to talk to anyone, where I would rather sit in a room on my own, if I am in a place with people around I either have my phone out or might read something so I am not disturbed. When I am like this I am prone to losing my temper at people.

Like I said when this happens it would last a few days and then when I snap out of it the only way I can describe it it is like coming out of a tunnel.

Does anyone else get days like that.



elsapelsa
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02 Apr 2018, 1:59 am

Yes, totally all the time. It is necessary recharging once I get depleted. A coping strategy to not get pushed over the edge.


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SteveSnow
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02 Apr 2018, 8:05 am

Absolutely I need alone time regularly to recharge and process my thoughts and emotions. I get crabby and prone to meltdowns if I can't be left alone for awhile.


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whatamievendoing
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02 Apr 2018, 10:17 am

On occasion, yes. And by "on occasion", I mean "usually after a long evening spent out and about with people".


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kraftiekortie
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02 Apr 2018, 10:19 am

Yeah, sure. I experience this feeling most of the time these days.



apus apus
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02 Apr 2018, 10:51 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
Yeah, sure. I experience this feeling most of the time these days.


Me too.



elsapelsa
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02 Apr 2018, 11:13 am

Do you think this gets worse / harder as you get older? I am undecided whether it is getting harder for me because of age (I am in my late 30s) or whether it is harder because I now live in a family of 4 and so my natural state is depletion as I have very little alone time. I don’t remember it feeling this hard before I had children.


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kraftiekortie
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02 Apr 2018, 11:16 am

It’s both harder and easier.

My need for “aloneness” has gotten more acute.

My ability to adjust when “aloneness” is impossible has gotten better, though.



Trueno
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02 Apr 2018, 11:17 am

I have days like that, but I assumed it was related to depression. Maybe I'm wrong. It's being short tempered with other people that's the weird thing.


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elsapelsa
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02 Apr 2018, 11:36 am

kraftiekortie wrote:
It’s both harder and easier.

My need for “aloneness” has gotten more acute.

My ability to adjust when “aloneness” is impossible has gotten better, though.


Thanks, that makes sense. I found myself crammed in a beach house with 16 people and two dogs last summer and found my only way to cope was to have at least an hour a day in the dark by myself.


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kraftiekortie
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02 Apr 2018, 11:41 am

From my vantage point, I would want that "one hour" to turn into "two hours," or even more.

If I'm in a certain sort of reverie, like that found in meditation (which is almost certainly what you do when you're "in the dark"), it's difficult for me to break out of it. It makes me feel tired and irritable.



elsapelsa
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02 Apr 2018, 12:43 pm

^ True.

I have found something that really helps me. In a large gathering I focus in on just one person and try to make myself instrumental to helping that person and using them to guide my behaviour. For example, if I choose my mother in law, then I just guide my choices dependent on how I can best help and serve her. It sounds odd but it really helps. Atleast then I forgo all the nervous energy of not knowing where to direct my attention. After trying that I have figured out that if I make my social interactions goal-driven as opposed to just aimless socialising, it doesn’t appear to exhaust me quite as much.


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kraftiekortie
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02 Apr 2018, 12:46 pm

Yep. Having a tangible goal does make things easier, and less aimless.

And it benefits the mother-in-law, in this particular case.



shortfatbalduglyman
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02 Apr 2018, 12:54 pm

The older I get the more days feel like that

And when I feel that way it lasts longer than a day

How dysfunctional

This is urban United States

Short of living in the wild, or agoraphobia, there are not many alternatives to social interaction

Buddhist monastery

Not to mention that I do not have the IQ score for a job that does not involve a lot of inherent social customer interaction



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02 Apr 2018, 2:41 pm

MrMacPhisto wrote:
Something I have observed about myself throughout the years.

I get days occasionally where I would go into a shell, end up not wanting to talk to anyone, where I would rather sit in a room on my own, if I am in a place with people around I either have my phone out or might read something so I am not disturbed. When I am like this I am prone to losing my temper at people.

Like I said when this happens it would last a few days and then when I snap out of it the only way I can describe it it is like coming out of a tunnel.

Does anyone else get days like that.


This was something my ex-wife identified about myself 15 years before I figured out that I was autistic. She used to set aside an hour or so at the end of each day so that I could have a little alone time each day. I usually don't need days of alone time, but an hour or two at the end of each day makes me a better person to be around the next day.


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ToughDiamond
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02 Apr 2018, 4:36 pm

Hard to tell these days, as I get a lot of decompression time and I rarely get into the kind of social situations I find difficult for very long. Retirement is like that. I've not often felt the pressure to get away from people I see as reasonably safe and having similar ways and core values to me, so the random mix of people where I used to work, for example, were somewhat draining and I always went home at lunchtime, even pre-diagnosis, in spite of some management pressure not to, and I was pretty firm about the working day ending on time. I don't like being anywhere where I think I'm being judged, and there's a lot of it about if I get into the wrong circles. In the right circles the worst feeling I've ever had is a bit of frustration that my social life is getting in the way of my getting other things done. I seem able to go for months without being away from my partner at all. We probably experience more social fatigue when socialising with others as a couple, because it's a more complicated social situation, but a couple seeking privacy is pretty normal. One-on-one is a lot easier than anything else, in many ways.

So I don't get unsociable days as such, the timing is different and the unsociability depends a lot on who the company is.