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Rand.
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Default Nov 07, 2014 at 09:13 PM
  #21
Schizoid is said to have the negative symptoms of schizophrenia. Schizotypal is more like schizophrenia but there are some clear differences like at the most only transient psychosis if any would be a big one. Schizoid is still a disorder in the DSM V

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Default Nov 16, 2014 at 09:21 PM
  #22
I suffer from this and although I want to socialize, I find myself withdrawing as soon as I get overwhelmed. My communication is terrible and that's what Iwanna work on here. Its unfortunate that tthere's not many here to interact with
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Default Feb 20, 2015 at 03:07 PM
  #23
I think that most people do not know they have this. I am turning 30 next month and just found out what SPD was the other day when looking at different mental illnesses on the internet. I came across SPD and I could not believe it. Everything made sense all of a sudden and it wasn`t just me that had this. It was good to put a name to what was wrong with me. I learned a lot about myself by just knowing about the disorder. I always knew something just wasn`t right. I just thought I had severe depression and social anxiety...and I do, but I was just seeing the symptoms and not the bigger picture. As a very young child I would not speak in school. As I got older I would only speak to certain children, and was afraid of adults. I did poorly in school because I was too worried that people were looking at me. Fast forward to know: I show no emotion on my face, I cannot work, want no interaction with people, isolate in my room, etc. Anyways, I got off track talking about myself. I think that it is a rare disorder that starts off as something genetic and is shaped by societal factors into something else as time goes on and the small percentage of people who suffer from this don`t know what it actually is.
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Default Feb 22, 2015 at 03:29 PM
  #24
I'm not officially diagnosed yet but I can relate. it's so hard for me to express any emotion verbally or even with words, often i don't know what to say. Maybe it's just a secret that even if I present myself as available and involved in interacting yet remain emotionally withdrawn myself from people. Having flat face expression, almost no difference between sad and normal, happy and normal and such.

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scatterbrained04
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Default Feb 23, 2015 at 07:33 PM
  #25
I would have to agree with Crow30 that many people probably don't know they have it. I only found out because I ended up going under psychiatric care for bipolar disorder. I had never heard of this personality disorder before.
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Default Feb 24, 2015 at 07:21 PM
  #26
Quote:
Originally Posted by Crow30 View Post
I think that most people do not know they have this. I am turning 30 next month and just found out what SPD was the other day when looking at different mental illnesses on the internet. I came across SPD and I could not believe it. Everything made sense all of a sudden and it wasn`t just me that had this. It was good to put a name to what was wrong with me. I learned a lot about myself by just knowing about the disorder. I always knew something just wasn`t right. I just thought I had severe depression and social anxiety...and I do, but I was just seeing the symptoms and not the bigger picture. As a very young child I would not speak in school. As I got older I would only speak to certain children, and was afraid of adults. I did poorly in school because I was too worried that people were looking at me. Fast forward to know: I show no emotion on my face, I cannot work, want no interaction with people, isolate in my room, etc. Anyways, I got off track talking about myself. I think that it is a rare disorder that starts off as something genetic and is shaped by societal factors into something else as time goes on and the small percentage of people who suffer from this don`t know what it actually is.

Pretty much all of this happened to me, but with social avoidance in school, and obsessive perfectionism instead of worrying. One of my most traumatizing/uncomfortable memories from childhood are ones of just having to ask an adult something, or tell a waiter what I wanted. Now an adult, I have social anxiety, generalized anxiety, OCD, and social avoidance. This on top of major depression since about age 14. All of this was finally "discovered" between 20 and 23, and some pretty much caused by trying to suppress the others for too long. A couple years ago, by chance and unrelated to latter experiences, I was just curious about exactly what a personality disorder was, and in researching ran across SPD. After struggling for so many years with these other issues and beating myself up daily trying to suppress or fix or fake or trying harder to deal, as I read its description and DSM points, I just immediately started crying in a state of "this can't be real" and complete relief and anger and resentment and feelings of enlightenment. Suddenly, in the span of about thirty seconds, I realized that it would never be "fixed," so I could stop thrashing against it and feeling guilty about it, and was completely relieved. It had a name. And the "personality disorder" name struck hard - this piece of the puzzle was just me, just as I'd always thought it had felt, not something broken or inferior. Just me. Why was I beating myself up over it? Instantly changed my outlook and gave me a forced, hard look in the mirror.

That said...Depression and anxiety stuff...eff that. Schizoid without emotional control...yeah, pretty much hell. There's the source of the struggle for me. I also cannot work and isolate myself. The distaste for general human interaction mixed with anxiety and depression makes it impossible. Interesting you mention genes, too - after years of unsuccessful depression treatment, I got a genetic test that found I have mutations in my serotonin transporter gene, making SSRIs useless for me. Awesome. ....Can't help but [more than] wonder if it's related, of course.

....Also, yet another thing I wonder about in relation to all this that could very well be off-topic: Am I really the only one who gets really f***ing pissed off and pointless angry from those so-called "HappyLights" instead of happy?

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Default Feb 25, 2015 at 11:52 PM
  #27
I might have this due to fitting the criteria. Then again, I'm self diagnosed.
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Default Feb 27, 2015 at 11:06 PM
  #28
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Originally Posted by ToeJam View Post
Stabbing in the dark here as I've no idea if this thread will actually be looked at with any regularity.... but.... are Schizoid (and I guess Schizotypal... will get to that) linked with Schizophrenia? I say this as my most recent personality disorder assessments have brought up the above two traits... yet I have been cleared of both schizophrenia and psychosis.
Just saw this - unfortunately I cannot remember where atm, but I have read that there is a much higher rate of developing schizophrenia seen in schizoid or schizotypal personalities than non, but that the personality types themselves are by no means a preindication of it developing.

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Default Mar 13, 2015 at 09:59 AM
  #29
Update since I originally posted in this thread, I am apparently diagnosed with SPD and have been for awhile. Ha, so here I am.

There's a lot of good posts in this thread, I can relate to many of them at least in part. Thank you all for sharing, I know it's hard because eh we're all schizoids so why bother with this interaction BS right?
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