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Anonymous37791
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Trig Jun 28, 2015 at 01:16 PM
  #1
i've never had a problem with drinking/substance and i know some do, hence the trigger warning, apologies in advance. i had a drink for the first time in years last night and suddenly had all of the courage in the world. my inhibitions were gone, i was able to pop into a full chatroom and go back and forth with several people and offer support and good feelings, silly joking and whatnot. walked to the store and chatted up the clerk instead of my usual nod in their general direction. i talked to a family member i haven't talked to in years. also got to talk to a friend here who is always so nice to me and reminded me how much i miss two of my primary hobbies.

and i'm realizing this morning that it's easy to lose essential parts of myself; identity, hobby, etc., when not in contact with other people. i don't mean constant contact, you know, but when you fall out of touch with the world completely for years-on-end, there's nothing and nobody to bounce your thoughts, feelings and interests off of, making all of them very difficult to gauge or hold onto. i guess the whole 'social species' thing has some merit even when i usually try to convince myself my reclusiveness and avoidance are just natural and correct.

and yeah, all of my inhibitions are back again this morning and i'm back in my little safe space. as much as i'd like to go talk to those same people in a group setting, even if it's 'just' online, i can't. i know i won't talk to that family member again for more years and i i don't know how much contact is appropriate with online friends. i am just overwhelmed so easily and can't handle being seen and judged, so it feels impossible to open up or be a bother. i wouldn't even say it's loneliness i feel now, but more frustration at my inability to form the bonds needed in order to feel loneliness in the first place. and the sadness that comes along with thinking/knowing this is something that may never change as one more year passes me by. accepting myself seemed like it'd be easy. being accepted feels impossible.
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Snap66
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Default Jun 29, 2015 at 06:40 AM
  #2
Keep focusing on how cool it was, who you spoke to and how you felt, rather than loose the night to negative thoughts.

Quote:
Originally Posted by bearpaws View Post
accepting myself seemed like it'd be easy. being accepted feels impossible.
This is wrong /\ / \
If you weren't accepted the night wouldn't have been such a success.
...and by the sounds of it you were accepted by many people

__________________
Diagnosed: AvPD.

It’s never alright. It comes and it goes.
It’s always around, even when it don’t show.
They say it gets better. well I guess that it might.
But even when it’s better, it’s never alright.
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Anonymous37868
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Default Jul 01, 2015 at 01:54 AM
  #3
Quote:
Originally Posted by bearpaws View Post
and i'm realizing this morning that it's easy to lose essential parts of myself; identity, hobby, etc., when not in contact with other people. i don't mean constant contact, you know, but when you fall out of touch with the world completely for years-on-end, there's nothing and nobody to bounce your thoughts, feelings and interests off of, making all of them very difficult to gauge or hold onto. i guess the whole 'social species' thing has some merit even when i usually try to convince myself my reclusiveness and avoidance are just natural and correct.
This makes since to me. Being alone so much and preferring it that way, it is easy to forget the upsides to being around others. They can be surprisingly warm, helpful and patient.

I'm trying to learn how to balance my time. How much time can I be with friends or family before I start feeling resentful of the alone time I'm losing. That's probably more of an innie thing than an avie thing. I'm sure it sounds harsh too. My solitude is the thing I'm most defensive of.

Can I ask you if you've ever tried anti-anxiety meds? And if they've helped any.

I agree with what Snap said. It sounds like others are accepting you but you aren't accepting you.
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Anonymous37868
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Default Jul 01, 2015 at 02:01 AM
  #4
In the morning did you regret socializing or just feel bad that the inhibitions came back. If you didn't regret socializing that is a good sign.

I used to feel guilty for talking. Anytime I said anything I would second guess myself. I would fixate on what I had said and worry about how others would perceive it and judge me.
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