The Pardox of Social Impairment and Profound Social Disconnectedness


© A.J. Mahari
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understanding the feeling experience of the shared social experience. This reality is accompanied by the anxiety and the stress (overload to my system) that much of this activity produces within me. To state it outright and forthrightly, I do not derive joy from anything social.

My experience of joy is very much a by myself internalized proposition. Knowing this can be, at times, a source of frustration and pain. Even when I am social I am not really totally there. It's difficult to explain this but as Yates explains, "Autistic people live like Tantalus*, with the fluent social interaction of others suspended before their eyes, out of reach." I can relate to this. To try to actually join in and feel a shared experience socially is like reaching for forbidden fruit that moves ever so slightly back every time I reach up and forward toward it. I have been in many a social situation where I do just end up observing because the social interaction of others is suspended out there before me and for me is out of reach in terms of experiencing it the way that others appear to be and report experiencing shared meaningful times that fill them up. Trying to socialize, which I don't mind in small doses, despite the pain of it all, for me is so stressful most of the time that unlike my NT friends empties me out leaving me just wanting to retreat back into my own world.

The fact that most NT's describe socializing as being a "filling up" experience that adds something to them and I know that it is the opposite for me, I don't see this as needing to be defined as anything else aside from a profound difference after its recognition.

Yates continues with the assertion that, "Social disconnectedness is the horse of autism: Secondary features are baggage in its cart."

Not everything about this social disconnectedness is experienced as baggage. That said, I think it would be highly negating if I were to say that this disconnectedness doesn't in fact leave an adult with AS with some baggage. It does.

The most difficult aspect of this baggage, which I'm sure varies with each adult with AS, though having, no doubt, some common themes, is that we are left to fend for ourselves with it. There are (with rare exceptions) no services for adults with Asperger's Syndrome.

In my own experience, the mental health issues and co-morbid issues that can exist with AS and its incumbent or subsequent baggage, are not effectively being dealt

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

1.   Feb 1, 2005 2:14 PM
Thanks again for another wonderful article, A.J..

I'm not sure if it's the exact same thing, but those of us who live with chronic illnesses feel a sense of social disconnectedness as well.

Even ...


-- posted by tamara_peters





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