Monday, January 21, 2013

Social Media and Aspies



 I like to write eloquently on a computer or on paper. But it is amazingly difficult to translate these ideas into verbal communications when speaking to another person. Then add to the fact the sense of dread that freezes these ideas when involved in a social interaction with a person.  I become reclusive as a result. There were many times in high school where friends would invite me to parties and girls would playfully flirt with me. I pretty much stonewalled on these interactions and shied away from them. The failure was not on my wanting, because I wanted to party with my friends and was desperate to correctly respond to the flirty advances. But I didn’t know how to do so nor was I aware of why. So most of my life in high school was withdrawing myself from everyone and reading or writing random or academic notes. In fact, I found my social need satisfied writing random nothings and school essays.

Staring at a sheet of paper was an intimate conversation with one’s own mind and translating it into ink. No stressful interactions, no miscommunication between the thoughts and vocal ideas, no need to decipher the movement and words of the recipient of your ideas. It is just you and your notes. But something miraculous happened in the twenty first century. Social media provided a venue for Aspies, like me, to interact without the burden of dealing with social cues of individuals. Random chatrooms became havens because I didn’t feel the need be careful of my words to the recipients. Strangers whom I never met were perfect to speak on my thoughts and emotions. These were people who would respond like humans but you would never meet. And you were just a random name or number to them. The anonymity of the internet allowed me to understand and craft social skills that would help me interact offline with friends. Celebrity chatrooms, 4chan, and then Reddit became perfect places for someone like me to open up and overcome my social deficiencies. In later years, Facebook and tumblr helped the transition from conversing with digital accounts to real friends who would converse on and offline. My diagnosis and treatment of Asperger Syndrome also helped with the transition to have healthy relationships and communication. It was in the latter years of my Bachelor studies and grad school where I finally had friends, fell in love, and survived the fallout of both.

Social media helped me and probably other Aspies in their journey to be among the neurotypicals (NTs). It wasn’t the exclusive tool I had to talk with NTs, but it was essential to do so. While I like to be reclusive, I now venture out into society to fill my need to communicate with other human beings. We are social creatures and Aspies are no different. It is just a matter of finding a way to channel the ideas swimming in our heads.

Sunday, April 8, 2012

It was a dark and stormy night...


An interesting quote from Edward Bulwer-Lytton. Interesting tidbit: most people with Asperger's syndrome are hypersensitive to instant and/or loud noises. The reason is due to our increased capability of our senses (smell, taste, feel, hear, see, etc.). Thunder and lightning are elements of nature that frighten most youths with this syndrome. I got used to these noises, but I remembered the experiences that I had to get here.

As someone diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome, it has taken me many years to open up to the general public. And it has taken longer when I experienced the fallout of bad social relations, such as heartbreak and betrayal. So this blog has around two years of age, but this is its first post.  It is time to introduce myself now that I've begun posting this blog to the entire internet. I have been a recluse for most of my life, especially during the years where my peers would socially mature in secondary school. I knew that something was odd about me due to the healthy dose of uncontrollable tics. I had no idea about that I would have an Autistic trait well into my adulthood. When I was officially diagnosed, I received the medical and psychological treatments in order to function in modern society. And it was in these years that I started having intimate friends, shared my heart, broke my heart, and became more inclusive in social events. The problem is that the treatments only go so far as most of the studies regarding this syndrome are still discovering new things. 

Now, I could say that I am an introvert and that I have remained withdrawn from society. On the other hand, I grew up amongst an extrovert family and have that trait in my bloodline. So it has been a clash between enjoying the comforts of a secluded life with the grandeur and spectacle of the convivial life. It is through this mental turmoil that I took advantage of the social media on the internet. It creates a social atmosphere that also allows someone like me to enjoy the creature comforts of physical exclusion. This allows me to open up to a community which I would have shied away from in the physical ambient. With this said and under an ominous thunderstorm, I hereby open my newest blog!