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Member
Member Since Oct 2015
Location: Denver
Posts: 198
9 13 hugs
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#21
Quote:
But what you describe here is exactly how it is for me, when I was a kid I had a few close friends and never wanted more than that. Ever since becoming an adult, I've felt like it's impossible to have that kind of friendship again. I don't know how to start being friends with someone, because in grade school it just kind of happened. You start playing with someone, you do it again the next day, next thing you know, you're best friends. It just doesn't work that way when you're an adult, it seems. I've had "friends" at work, but very rarely make the effort to see them outside of work. One of the problems is that everyone else seems to already have their group of friends, and I feel like they don't need another one, or I'd be intruding or taking time away from their other friends if we tried to be friends outside of work. |
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2008
Location: Illinois, USA
Posts: 3,052
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#22
I am diagnosed SPD and I have been married for 28 years. And yes, I love my husband. I have worked hard to try to see his needs and wants and to respond to them, which I think comes naturally for people w/o SPD. I guess that is how I show my love
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New Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: Kenya
Posts: 1
8 |
#23
It is possible. I am either in love or infatuated with someone right now, but I'm yet to feel the "butterflies in the stomach" that people talk about. Perhaps it's the anhedonia.
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Junior Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 16
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#24
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kecanoe
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Member
Member Since Jul 2015
Location: CA
Posts: 294
9 7 hugs
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#25
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Junior Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 16
8 |
#26
Tiger 8... Are you asking me what I feel? Forgive me if this question has not been addressed to me.
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Junior Member
Member Since Jan 2016
Location: North Carolina
Posts: 16
8 |
#27
I feel that we have the greatest potential for a successful relationship that would in deed suit us both... With minimal stretch on either persons part. I feel like I am loving a porcupine. Yet I feel he likes me very very much...
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Member
Member Since Jul 2015
Location: CA
Posts: 294
9 7 hugs
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#28
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New Member
Member Since Dec 2016
Location: Cincinnati
Posts: 7
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#29
Quote:
We are not uncaring people. And within our comfort zones are capable of letting people know we care and that they are loved, etc. We just don't stay in that zone 24/7. |
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Grand Member
Member Since Jun 2008
Location: WYLTK
Posts: 768
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#30
Quote:
I guess I really understand that part. And one of the hardest things to deal with is people who don't understand that that's who I am, I have my limits. I can be around others, to socialize (if that's the word to use), and spend time with & interact with people. but at the same time, I need my alone time! I can spend the weekend with my family (8 plus my two young teenage nephews and my 2 yo niece) [most times is not with all of them at once], but then I need my 'recuperating' time. [which is why I have no problem at all leaving them to drive back home after dark instead of spending the night and leaving the next day.] I need my time to myself to unwind, relax, calm down, sleep - basically to just be me. I agree it is a balancing act. if you find someone who can understand that and be flexible with that and even if they don't understand the specifics but be okay with the broad concept, then romantic relationships could work. I don't have much knowledge on the 'love or romantics' side of it, mostly due to not experiencing that. but I suppose the possibility is out there side note-> I lived with my parents for a few years (when I was in my mid-twenties) and there were things I was doing that only people with schizoid traits could understand. my dads a farmer and my mother is retired and so after spending like 6 or 8 hours a day around them, I would stay up half the night just to get in my 'me' time. they hated it, made fun of me for the hours I kept, and just made things harder on me. but they didn't / couldn't understand that it was just who I was. that after being around people for a long enough time period, that I need alone time - to balance things out... |
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