And totally want a 'Shimmerzville'!
I would also like to come live in Shimmerzville where we would all probably do really well together. With that said:
@EveHarrington I hear you and I have struggled with fitting in my entire life. I had severe social anxiety disorder for a good 8 to 10 years. I still suffer but not nearly as much as I did.
Now, I don't think we are talking about fitting in as in highschool fitting in right? We are talking about your "normal" every day adults and living among them yes? I don't know you and I don't know if you work or are social or where you are trying to behave to fit in but maybe some of what I do could help.
Take my advice for what it is worth and this is just how I cope and deal with being social. There is no wrong or right. It is what works.
Don't wear yourself on your sleeve. Someone once told me whatever you do in life "don't wear your heart on your sleeve". At first I thought that meant not to display any emotion at all to be stoic and just walk among people without any change in myself. However, that's not what it meant at all. It meant using filters. Don't go out there showing everyone "Hey look at me I have PTSD and I feel like shit!" Hide yourself to an extent (not completely) because people either do 1 of 2 things
1. freak out when they realize gee this person has some baggage and they run for the hills not wanting any part of it for whatever reason of their own
2. take advantage of you because they feel you are weak.
Try to find a balance between being you and not being you. It works for me. There is a level of "play" I feel when it comes to being social. If you watch toddlers like 4,5,6 playing you can learn a thing or two....kids usually don't care what the other kid looks like at that age. The only thing they care about is whatever the other kid is playing. If it looks good to them then they are all in no questions asked. Kids who have never met will play for hours with one another. Why? Because it is fun! We need to find fun in being social and stop worrying about whether we look good or are behaving correctly.
Be picky in who you want to fit in with. Don't go picking a bunch of snobbish people who are self absorbed and careless. Find people who YOU find interesting.
Stop being so hard on yourself and stop saying you don't fit in anywhere otherwise you never will.
One thing I have tried to do is find a commonality among others; whether that be at work, at a party etc. So for example, if I hear someone at work talking to another person about sports I'll remember that for when I interact with them and I'll say "hey how about that game last night..." or whatever the topic would be. It's an ice breaker, it gets the conversation going. After that just go with it. Everyone is human. Remember that. Despite your past and how you may be feeling there is a place where you fit in.
That's all I got. I read through most of the posts here and it sounds like everyone gave some good feedback.
~L