First, might it be true that you FEEL alone, even if you're not truly alone? Still a problem, but a slightly different one.
Yes, I realize I'm not truly alone. My DH loves me, my kids love me, even my dysfunctional family loves me as best they know how. People at my church seem to appreciate my being there. But, well, I'm not sure how to explain it. How would a color-blind person explain what they don't see?
I watch people interacting. Someone loses a loved one, or gets a new job, or has a new baby. And people interact with that person in emotional ways. And the person responds as if it makes a difference to them. I thought everyone was acting...just pretending to be touched by interactions with other people. I'm still not completely convinced that they're
not acting. But whatever they're getting out of those interactions...I don't. It's just work to me. It's just a performance. I care about people, and want good for them. I go to great lengths to try not to hurt anyone to the best of my understanding of how that should be done in healthy ways. But if someone says Hi to me? Or gives me a gift, or a compliment, or a hug? Or whatever other emotional interaction people have? It's wasted on me. It does nothing for me inside.
How do any of us experience this? Know what I mean? How does anyone feel "connected"?
I honestly don't know. I truly thought everyone was acting...
pretending to feel connected. I studied people's behavior and learned the rules and tried to play the part right. But then I got fed up with all this "faking it" and tried to stop faking it, and then people started responding saying I was being cold and mean (e.g., for not giving hugs, or not going through the niceties before starting a conversation, or avoiding small talk, etc), when really I was just trying to be honest and authentic.
do you think you'd know it if you felt it? Any idea what it would be like?
I'm not sure. I have a sense of what I
think it would feel like, based on watching other people's reactions to each other. But it's only a guess. And my understanding of all of this has been greatly distorted by growing up around such unhealthy role models (who I was emulating and using their behavior as models for how I should also behave and what I should want, because I thought they represented "normal").
So I've spent the past 2 years intensely studying healthier people and relationships, and trying to engage in relationships in those healthier ways, hoping that maybe I just was pursuing the wrong target, and some redirection would help me figure all of this out. And it
has helped to recognize where I was feeding into some dysfunctional relationships--I feel a sense of space and peace as I move away from those destructive relational patterns.
But it's still more of the same overall pattern from my whole life. All my life, I kept thinking, "I just need to keep trying to act more normal, and eventually, I'll pull it off well enough that I will actually
feel what normal people feel." But it hasn't worked, no matter which role models I'm using.
I do feel a sense of "presence" with my T that I've only rarely/briefly felt with other people. Is that love?
It seems that he knows himself so deeply and so fully that he doesn't need anything from me...he is completely himself, while holding space for me to just be me. He
exists as himself in the relationship...there's no need for mirroring in either direction. (He does, however, offer
observations of what he sees in me. It's less like mirroring, and more like "experiencing," if that makes any sense.)
I don't know enough about Asperger's to know how it affects your perception of feelings.
I do have feelings that, I think, are essentially the same as anyone else's. They seem to manifest in my body in rather normal, conventional ways. But the things my feelings respond to are different than what other people's feelings respond to. And I'm never able to express my feelings authentically on the outside with other people. They're locked up inside. I can
act sad at "appropriate" times, or happy, or angry. But it's just a performance based on what I think I
should be feeling. The real feelings...I can only connect with them when I'm by myself, inside myself, and they still don't manifest on the outside in ways that are discernible to other people.
So...these feelings are very deep and very painful, with no outlet at all.
I wonder if maybe you never had the chance to learn HOW to receive things like "love"?
I think, to a degree, this is true. I never had anyone acknowledge my unique existence in a way that validated my own feelings or thoughts or values, except to the degree that I reflected those people back to themselves. "Sameness" was of the utmost importance. And so I never got to know myself because no one ever acknowledged my existence as my own person. I'm working on that now for myself. But...how do you reflect back yourself to yourself when you have no sense of your own identity?
I'm so used to reflecting everyone else's feelings and desires and expectations of me back to them, because that's what it took for me to know how to act, that I don't know what I feel anymore. I can hardly access my feelings at all when I'm around other people.
But I'd like to think anything that can be screwed up can be relearned. Maybe not perfectly, but better.
The problem is...learned behavior is not quite the same as "being yourself." I can play the games and say the "right" things, but it's not "me." It's just a performance, where I'm cognitively following rules instead of naturally expressing myself.