vcrpamphlet wrote:Have you ever found a dishonest approach helpful with that, or is the vibe more on the compulsive side?
Dishonest in the sense of portraying myself as softer/more interested etc than I am in reality? yes I always do that, even here. Though I will point out that plenty of our ‘empath’ and ‘Non’ members have admitted to presenting themselves as more confident or friendly than they feel. Whether it counts as dishonest is a matter of perspective, they seem to say it isn’t, I say it is.
If you mean in terms of playing a fictionalised character. I’ve done that, more so when I was younger. As I’ve got older and interactions have become more significant and more demanding (in terms of the standard of conduct) I tend to avoid it due to the problems it creates further down the line. If I do it now it’s usually for my own amusement in a situation which doesn’t matter.
I’m perfectly capable of adapting myself to someone else 1-to-1 and most of my social success relies on the ability to rapidly create the illusion or reality of trust and personal intimacy to such a degree that I often come off as more honest and real than those people who actually are. It’s something which I have always found very easy and some what amusing (that the thing I’m best at faking is sincerity). Transactional analysis usually terms it ‘one sided intimacy’. Typically I have to be interested in the individual to bother with that which has the result of making me clannish.
However that ability is reliant on being able to be able to closely observe and interact with the individual. Unscripted social group dynamics, where I don’t know the participants individually, are an issue as there is a set of unspoken social rules and behaviours which go straight over my head. Hence I often end up having to dominate the group and make it play by my rules or alter it subtly by generating 1-to-1 relationships with the key players.
Equally there are often issues with the fact that I fail to value the things that others may deem as important or significant. Most comedic version of that I can remember was in my early 20s when a guy in the swimming team spent ages waffling on about the women he’d slept with, then when I react with a combination of disinterest and contempt, he says repeatedly in an exasperated manner “some of them were Asians” as if that made all the difference. Needless to say the interaction did not enamour me to him. Mostly though it has more to do with my failure to comply with someone’s wacky self image. Generally speaking I won’t bend for others unless there is something to motivate me to do so.
loosely I guess I would say friends are people I gain a sense of well being from interacting with, obviously there are degrees of that.I don’t really have online friends, or if I do they aren’t the same. There are people I like more than others but the interaction doesn’t cause me any sense of enjoyment or well-being. Typically I interact out of intellectual interest, to piss about or sometimes because someone’s rubbing my compulsivity up the wrong way, though I’ve mostly given up on the latter in this place.
How do you describe your own threshold of the term? It seems possible to have just as meaningful a non-sexual relationship via voice, video and text as can be achieved in person. It’s just, that potential requires more conscientiousness and blind investment than most of us are used to.
When I was reading the books about transactional analysis it was quite apparent that a large proportion of the social interactions which people supposedly gain fulfilment from simply aren’t having the same effect for me and consequently I regard them as little more than an irritating ritual I have to endure for tactical reasons.
This would possibly explain why my threshold for ‘friend’ is so high and my tendency to behave like a bastard to those I am merely acquainted with. The underlying reward circuitry which causes them to value our relationship (or view it as a relationship at all) simply isn’t operating the same way for me.
As to whether someone could find deep meaning in online friendships, I say only that I could not.
I’ve said repeatedly in my previous incarnation that my ability with people is entirely dependent on proximity. I need to be able to see them, hear their tone of voice and experiment with them (often via the application of stress) to find out how they work. Deprived of this I tend to come across less pleasantly. It isn’t necessarily deliberate just a case of not having any means by which to gauge reaction. A similar phenomenon occurs if I get too involved in a discussion and cease to temper myself in accordance with their reactions, I come across as aggressive sometimes to the point of physical threat which is not necessarily intentional.
Equally I suspect many of the things I find gratifying about my relationship with my friends would be loss potent or non-existent in a digital format.