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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 3,428
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Joined: Aug 2010
Posts: 3,428 |
I'm emotionally intense myself, but am okay with most social situations (I don't love small talk with people with whom I have nothing in common). I don't generally feel like I am on the wrong planet, although I have been known to accidentally come off as aloof or slightly odd. Please forgive me if I'm completely out of line, but could it be at all possible that you might have Asperger's? Your post did make me think of the name of this forum: http://www.wrongplanet.net/
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 978
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 978 |
Sure! Absolutely. Cognition proceeds socialization - not just in terms of topics of interest, but also relating to reactivity and intensity. I'm much better now, but when I was younger I felt really... distant & unplugged. I just didn't get people. I've changed a lot since and come out of my shell. I really think the difference for me was becoming a mother: parenthood is universally uniting. I understand other people now and finally I feel like I have common ground. Yay kids
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 269
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Joined: May 2011
Posts: 269 |
I really think the difference for me was becoming a mother: parenthood is universally uniting. I understand other people now and finally I feel like I have common ground. Yay kids I'm glad that worked for you! I thought I was doing OK as an adult, until I became a mom at playgrounds and found that I could only socialize with other scientists. Lawyers and full-time moms still baffled me. I eventually went back to work for the social aspect. Sigh.
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Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 530
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Joined: Nov 2009
Posts: 530 |
I'm with Ljoy; I thought I was doing ok there, for a while. Then I had kids and realized who my friends are... let's just leave it at "not a representative sample of the population," shall we?
DS1: Hon, you already finished your homework DS2: Quit it with the protesting already!
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 978
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Joined: Jun 2012
Posts: 978 |
ljoy and Michaela - lol what an interesting topic (a thread on its own!).
I think for me, prior to kids, I felt like I had nothing in common with anyone. Mind you (this could be the difference) I never went to university (long story for the therapist's office, lol), so I was never connected with people like me (other than my sister). Then I had kids, sent them to a French Immersion / Montessori school that is populated by kids with educated parents, et voila... suddenly I could talk to people.
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 2,856
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Joined: Oct 2011
Posts: 2,856 |
If anything, my parenting experience has made me feel more alien, not less, because it throws our parenting style and our child into stark relief.
And while I watch other parents harming their children in ways they don't even understand, I find myself liking earthlings even less than before.
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,007
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,007 |
I'm glad that worked for you! I thought I was doing OK as an adult, until I became a mom at playgrounds and found that I could only socialize with other scientists. Lawyers and full-time moms still baffled me. I eventually went back to work for the social aspect. Sigh. I thought I was doing OK as an adult until I became a lawyer.
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Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1
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New Member
Joined: Nov 2012
Posts: 1 |
Dear Persephone,
We seem to have very similar circumstances, as far as that any time I attempt to verbalize my thoughts, the only reactions I receive are either a bewildered dismissal or a base reason why what I had just said is completely absurd. In fact, as I write this post, I am tearing up because I feel so unengaged.
I should provide some background. I am 27 years old, formerly a composer and musician. I had a breakdown of sorts, and left my conservatory when I was 21. Oh, and my SAT score was 1410/1600, but I didn't apply myself in high school since I knew I wanted to become a composer. So, after I left the conservatory, my parents provided me with some psychiatric support, and part of that package was an IQ test, on which I scored 160. After all of the testing, the doctors also said that I had dysthymic depression (you should look that up.... fun time), ADD (Attention deficit disorder (which is redundant), and "possibly a mild form of Asperger syndrome". Later, they tacked on Obsessive Compulsive disorder (again, redundant), along with post traumatic stress, from my breakdown in music. Since then, I have spent the last 6 or 7 years trying to put my mind back in order, and graduated from a public college (with a singularly pathetic GPA of 2.147)with a degree in political science. For the past year and a half I have lived with my parents, struggling to find a job that would utilize the abilities I have to offer. In between my failed attempts at obtaining a job, I have occupied myself with such activities as dedicating time to brushing up my French, learning German and Italian; building statistical databases for online games to determine optimal strategy; creating an urban renewal plan for a nearby city; rewriting my state's constitution; calculating the electrical usage of all devices in my house and what to replace them with for optimal savings; determining the impact of President Obama's policies upon the US economy (please, let's not get into a political debate here); designing a means of preventing hurricanes from forming; assessing the military capabilities of Kazakhstan, developing a simple recipe and machine for mass producing dog treats from my house; rewriting several computer programs; creating a blueprint for a new prison facility; designing a new military vehicle; as well as numerous other projects that I have done, simply to keep my mind occupied. I am still in therapy, and my therapist brought up a correlation I never heard of or thought about... ability vs. achievement. Most of the projects I just mentioned above, are unfinished. As I continue to sit here, wasting my life away because no one can see what ability I can provide them, my depression simply reiterates the fact that I have no achievements. I am likely doomed to live a life where I work at my family business, moving boxes of supplies from a palate, to a shelf, and then back again. This future is not because that's what I want or deserve, but because the world around me is too friggin dumb to listen to what I have to say or see the world from my, different, perspective.
Did you never wonder why people reference "the village idiot"? Its because the village kept the idiot around, while they kicked the smart people out and called them witches and heretics. Keep saying what you're saying, and keep saying it louder and louder. Oh, and a last piece of advice... I have found that it is easier to do something, first, and then have to explain it... rather than asking permission.
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 1,032
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Joined: Apr 2009
Posts: 1,032 |
Lugh, you are definitely an alien who belongs in this forum! I hope you'll stick around and discuss things here!
Have you considered joining a think tank? I don't know how one applies, but it couldn't hurt to try.
Add me to the list of people who learned even more about how much I don't belong when I had kids. I cry when I even think about having to hang out and talk to "those moms", otherwise known as the PTA moms. It's high school all over again.
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Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 2,007
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After all of the testing, the doctors also said that I had dysthymic depression (you should look that up.... fun time), ADD (Attention deficit disorder (which is redundant), and "possibly a mild form of Asperger syndrome". Later, they tacked on Obsessive Compulsive disorder (again, redundant), along with post traumatic stress, from my breakdown in music. Look! A younger non-lawyer version of me. That is simply adorable.
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