So I guess I was forced to get good at making educated guesses, and adapt from my consistent mistakes and social failures.
When did you realize this Valentino? I would be interested in knowing what process you used to figure this out.
This is a difficult question, it wasn't like one big light bulb moment type event. It was a long process of trial and error. I grew up in a brainwashing and active use of shaming type environment, I developed psychological toughness from a total lack of emotional support or understanding, and a constant barrage of not good enough criticism.
My childhood strategy was to internalize and disarm my connection with anger, and strengthen emotional detachment. This generally worked fine until my multiple adult traumas, involving injury, accident, criminal victimizations, and secondary wounding from aggressive personality disordered people. The traumas brought me face to face with the downside and limitations of an internalized anger strategy. The major downside was being stuck in total freeze and utter confusion, when diplomacy and emotional detachment failed. Without access to anger, the energy of action and self protection, I literally was frozen, totally at the mercy of other's anger or the natural chaos within the world.
Yes, I could eventually run away to safety one way or another. But I had lost confidence in being to keep myself safe, and my ability to predict and respond to dangers towards myself.
So, I probably started off getting good at working with raw fear, the energy behind freezing, being alert, paying attention, observing, etc. I can probably out-endure most anyone with staying conscious and aware in the midst of raw emotional chaos. My spiritual practices of selfless service, disciplined daily meditation sitting with what is, lots of contemplation, and total immersion with studying and learning, helped expand my capacity to endure the intolerable.
But, all of that work was primarily inner work, done in isolation.
All of my traumas had an external relational aspect to them. Whether it's development trauma from parent's neglect and psychological brainwashing. Or social trauma caused indirectly from the social blindness and ignorance from having an Aspie brain. Or abuse trauma from others from accidents, crime, disagreements, triggers, etc. Or Narcissist/Borderline personality disorder trauma from just being an easy target for them to dump on.
Effective and practical relationship and communication skills were still lacking.
So this is where learning to appreciate and work with Anger fits in. Finding my voice, and learning how to use it, trust it, communicate it so that others can hear it and respect it.
But it's also recognizing the limitations and flaws of 'niceness' strategies. In a sense there is a tyranny within niceness. It's a social and cultural pressure to keep people's authenticity silenced, it's a primary way that we unconsciously fall into disarming our anger, silencing our voice and authenticity, and lose touch with a core creative energy within.
I'm still in the process of discovering my anger and finding my voice.
One turning point happened on this forum a little over a year ago. I was on the receiving end of a vicious personal attack including distortion fog. And for whatever reason, I didn't play nice and let it slide, I took a stand, held my ground, and challenged back. I still lost in public, because my ability stand up for myself and communicate it clearly within social norms was still lacking. And my nervous system was totally trembling from raw vulnerability and anger. But that experience, me taking action and taking a stand. Allowed me to rediscover an inner child that had been lost.
here's some of my personal insights shortly after that experience:
REBELLION! Defending my right to have and trust my own FEELINGs...
My secondary woundings by narcissist and borderlines actually got me to lose trust in my sense of reality and my own feelings, I lost trust in my own gut and instincts. WHY? Because both narcissists and borderlines blasted me with DISTORTION campaigns, and I ended up believing them.
Being an Aspie I'm already naturally prone to be confused with trusting my instincts and emotions. Things often come out wrong or misunderstood. So growing up I learned ways to translate and filter myself, and read the situation. I came across socially awkward but I was okay and comfortable with that.
Post PTSD I had to relearn and develop a whole new social interaction blueprint, in this case I ended up being overly cautious, that strategy was adequate, but failed with defending me against the secondary wounding.
1 - overly cautious means I was projecting weakness, fear and lack of confidence. And to a predator type personality of a borderline or narcissist, they instantly sense weakness and instantly see me as easy prey..
2 - Being overly cautious means I'm projecting a subtle anxiety/fear energy, which borderline/narcissists also don't like feeling
3 - Being overly cautious means that I would focus on conserving MY own ENERGY, and would disregard or not pay attention to all the constant needs for irrational attention by a borderline/narcissist. Essentially thumbing my nose to their incessant need for 'narcissistic supply' (look at me, attention).
So, I ended up breaking tons of vital rules that borderlines and codependents (programmed by borderline's distortion fields) constantly promote and reinforce through peer pressure, subtle shaming, and outright vicious public shaming. This becomes the norm in a rescuer/enabler type support community or in a therapist/patient relationship.
It just creates an addiction to co-dependence. Which is essentially promoting, YOU CAN NOT and WILL NOT EXPRESS or FEEL your own feelings unfiltered. You might DIE if you trust your feelings and instincts, feeling suicide thoughts might create suicide!!! (cast shame, fear, and doubt, masked in rescuer language and surface feelings).
xxxxxx's shaming co-depedence enforcement/training method was to attack me for having Aspie feelings and thinking. Valentino, you are wrong, you are broken! let me help you! You trusted your feelings and instincts! That is BAD! You should not trust it, it is wrong, it is hurtful, it is damaging to others! Instead, don't trust and express your feelings. CONSIDER other people's feelings (neurotypicals)! Other people's feelings are more important!!! (meant more as Borderline's feelings are #1 important, I need narcissistic supply!!) Your feelings and instincts don't matter! Drop that Aspie label, drop generalizations, simply DO NOT think for yourself, LET ME THINK FOR YOU, LISTEN TO my DISTORTION CAMPAIGN of REALITY!!! it might not be totally true, but it's actually BETTER than reality!! why be honest? Living a lie is ultimately better! that's the way to avoid toxic shame!!!
Back then I was still exploring things through a narcissist/borderline, codependence terms and framework. Now I think it's simpler to describe it as excess anger energy, it's all about too much or too little relationship with RAGE. Too much is more persecutor, while too little delves into internal critic and niceness disease.
Anyway, in closing, I'll share some other perspectives:
Tyranny of Niceness by Evelyn Sommers:
To be nice is to silence aspects of one's authenticity.
Niceness means giving up honesty in relationships because entrenched fear of judgment or disapproval overrides the inclination to be forthright. The nice person speaks and acts in ways that he or she believes will guarantee approval or at least not elicit disapproval.
I have learned that degrees of niceness are not possible since silence does not exist in degrees, but this does not mean that rude and disrespectful behavior which is what one may think is the only substitute for being nice is acceptable.
I have learned that degrees of niceness are not possible since silence does not exist in degrees,
Children are not born nice. Far from it, infants are noisy and demanding. Children are taught to be nice as the way to get along with other people. The
essence of niceness training is obedience to authority.
Niceness is a language of apology and politeness, ubiquitous and therefore familiar, as is any social norm, and it is a
powerful deterrent to authentic relating, a mechanism of distancing rather than connection.
Niceness fails to live up to its reputation. It does not make relationships easier, does not guarantee a stamp of approval nor improve the quality of life. On the contrary,
niceness often causes confusion in relationships because of the dishonesty implicit in suppressing one's authentic thoughts and feelings.
Being nice increases one's sense of alienation from oneself, by far the harshest consequence of all. Niceness detracts from one's quality of life by contributing to health and addiction problems that are an outgrowth of stressful internal conflicts. In contrast, any difficulties that occur in achieving the essential honesty of authentic acts and speech are overridden by the internal calm that prevails in its wake.
--- full article:
https://www.psychotherapy.net/article/niceness
Karla McLaren on understanding and befriending anger:
Anger is one of my favorite emotions, because when you know how to work with it, it can help you become more authentically yourself — and more able to interact authentically and honorably with others as well. Anger is a wonderful and pro-social emotion when you know how to work with it.
However, when people don’t know how to work with anger — when they attack others with it, or when they repress it and lose their way — anger can be a real problem. The troubles that many people have with anger make it one of the most hated emotions there is, but this is truly a shame, because
anger brings you gifts that are irreplaceable.
...
ANGER: The Honorable Sentry
GIFTS: Honor ~ Conviction ~ Self-awareness ~ Healthy self esteem ~ Proper boundaries ~ Healthy detachment ~ Protection of yourself and others
ACTION REQUIRED: Anger arises to address challenges to your standpoint, your position, your interpersonal boundaries, or your self image. Your task is to restore your sense of self and your interpersonal boundaries without violating the boundaries of others. Your anger will also step in when others are being challenged or devalued, and your task is to address the offense and restore the boundaries of all parties. This is the sacred practice for anger, which I very intentionally call The Honorable Sentry.
THE INTERNAL QUESTIONS: What must be protected? What must be restored?
--- full blog post:
http://karlamclaren.com/understanding-and-befriending-anger/
The current social norm is to reinforce fear of anger, to limit anger and to silence people's authentic voices. And it might be even worse in Canada, where being nice is even a higher ideal than it is in America, where here it's more about the selfish 'pursuit of happiness', and recently much less about liberty & 'freedom of speech'.
Anger is the energy behind action, so maybe the best way to build a relationship with it is through action. Understanding can work great for anxiety and fear, connecting, communicating and comparing works well for getting to know sadness, shame, separation anxiety and grief. But Anger and Rage is about taking action, movement and getting in touch with physical instincts & body sensations. It might be more about learning through experience and repetition of reacting and responding to raw emotional impulses.