desiderata310
VIP Member
@DogwoodTree Some days yes. public displays of affection make me squirm on a good day. I usually look away.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Could that be own abuse mingled in, @DogwoodTree? Making already existing sensory issue skewed in a particular direction?
Any chance you have SPD?
I see how people move... Know where they're going to be next based on hundreds of subtle cues. I read faces & body language like an open book (incredibly difficult as a child, because most people lie, almost continuously. Their faces and bodies say one thing, their mouths something else... That's half of ADHD social awkwardness -or extreme charisma-, by the by.
I had a harder time distancing myself from the way people around me felt, emotionally. When I'm not doing well maintaining my own integrity/boundaries, I avoid looking at people. It's too easy to take their emotions on as my own. It's just science, not magic, and yep. A form of mirroring. Feeling physically? It's a duller thing, typically, but yes... That's also there. Or rather, it can be. Again, totally depends on how well I'm minding my boundaries.
When I see people touch, if I'm not consciously ignoring it? I get three pieces of information; what A would probably* feel along their body, what B would probably* feel along their body, and what I would feel along mine. It's usually a pretty ghostly thing... But I also get the trajectories of where each of those people are going to be next, and a few hundred other pieces of information.
Took me years and years as a kid to sort out that people feel things differently than I do & vice versa. Unfortunately, the micro expressions in their faces usually read far too clearly. That took years to delineate, as well. I may know that a smiling person feels deep shame, or sadness, or whatever... But I don't know what they're ashamed of, or what is making them sad. It's far too easy in both cases to jump to conclusions.
So...seeing people touching can be a trigger...BUT, do you actually feel the touch yourself when you see it? Or does it just trigger painful memories/etc?