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Does anybody here ever feel like a social Chamaeleon? Like as if you understand other people, behavior, and small talk enough to engage/communicate with other people and get by day to day, but also struggle to form real connections and engage with people in a meaningful way.
Does anybody here ever feel like a social Chamaeleon? Like as if you understand other people, behavior, and small talk enough to engage/communicate with other people and get by day to day, but also struggle to form real connections and engage with people in a meaningful way.
I sometimes ponder what I might have done with all this knowledge had I learned of it so much earlier. It might have helped me get over stage fright and public speaking. After all, in real-life I've discovered I was "acting" much of the time. Maybe that's where I should have looked for a career, and gotten paid for it.
Daryl Hannah rocks.![]()
Because of my job I have to constantly change throughout the day to match the people I'm with. My previous work was similar in that I wasconfronted ny new people daily.
Guess I got used to changing quickly.
Genuine curiosity, neighbor:
How do you manage the high daily cost of having to shift like that constantly and because of outside (uncontrolled) stimulus that way? I was a professional salesman for awhile for a decade before I discovered my Asperger's, both in and out of retail, and... I just always found that no matter how I twisted and adjusted and dodged and reacted to developing a balance to try and make that work, it always, always ended up being a net loss of sanity over time, trying to hold those jobs. I never kept any one for a full year, in fact; at best I could balance things to slow the decay and daily loss to hold out for months and months, but it was always inevitable exhaustion in the end.
Are we just fundamentally different subtypes of aspie, do you think?
Honestly, the natural analytical perspective and the distance it gives us from the subject (and object) matter, the very same thing that makes even our perfect skillful chameleon shifts a glossy-cardboard-at-best facsimile of real social connection in the moment, would probably make a startling number of us phenomenal actors. You spoke in partial joke-tone about it, but seriously? I strongly suggest that you float past some aspect of your community's local theatre or performing arts outlet sometime, and see if you don't feel a spark of serendipitous ignition. Finding the ways our natural differences can socially and culturally produce is arguably the single most keystone element in the successful adult aspie's reintegration journey.
Don't aim to audition or anything else too lofty yet; that's just a scary-high starting bar that casts too long and deep a shadow. Just visit. Ask a question. Attend a show, maybe. Spectate first, analyze, assess. You know how we do.
But consider the notion, neighbor.
Interesting idea. However at my age I don't see yet another career on my horizon.
I'm just trying to survive (literally) to a questionable retirement only a few years away.![]()