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PT was kinda silly. Most of what they showed me exercise wise the orthopedic surgeon could have told me to do in about 5 minutes at home, and I wouldn't be $10 co-paying. But, if I cancel and or refuse to go, the Dr. will probably drop me, and if serious issues eventually develop, it will essentially be my fault. I'm sure insurance has something to do with all of this. It's alright I guess - they told me my hamstrings are incredibly tight which is bad, and I've always kind of known that - hopefully that's what's causing most of the issues in my left knee, and it can be rectified shortly. I hate hamstring stretches, but I can't say I'm against fixing that issue if it's possible. Plus, once I get better, it will help me a lot in my dead lifts and squats to be more flexible below the waistline.

Work has been okay, I guess. Nothing has changed. Everyone is still negative as all hell. Mr. 4th DUI showed up and received his final letter, which he had to sign. If he misses any more work, he will probably be terminated, with or without a doctor's excuse. Like I said...about half of the team called in sick for a week of my vacation. It actually kinda irks me, because I took my vacation - all of it - fair and square. It resulted in me having more work to do when I came back than I should have had, and it's -really- not fair. If I called in for a week straight, I'd be in serious trouble. Mr. 4th DUI has missed about 8 weeks of work, most without Dr. excuses, in the past 10 months. He's basically invincible...I'm not even sure they'd terminate him if he missed more. Such is the unfairness of life. Even people who are untrustworthy and undependable can be kept employed if a company is frightened that it can't find more people who are at least as competent as said person. There's like no real human capital in this area...you'd think that'd make my chances better at finding very lucrative work. Ah well.

The more I read on autism the more I wonder about myself. I know I lack a lot of soft skills, and I definitely suffer from some degree of this whole strange planet syndrome...but on the same token, I'm not really sure I'm all that incapacitated by it. My social issues could even be the result of very high intelligence and a naturally serious demeanor. I'm very business oriented and have a hard time with small talk, have a hard time building meaningful rapport with new people, have a hard time starting conversations (although I don't seem to have much of a problem with some.) That being said I don't generally /try/ to start conversations, either. I have enough going on in my own mental train of thought, and whatever it is I'm trying to accomplish at the moment. With my friends and family, I don't really have any issues. So self-diagnosis is questionable at best - I'm not super attractive, not super popular. I don't get a lot of female attention even with my above average physique. I'm not sure if I'm autistic or not, but I definitely can't seem to get certain things straight in my life...and those things are commonly associated with people who suffer from Aspergers.

I have been told I'm cold and unapproachable, and that is probably true. I don't think a lot of women fall head over heels for guys like that. My last girlfriend actually told me I'm probably in for a long life of loneliness if I don't seek psychological help for my depression and outlook on life. Not that she was free of psychological issues herself - she was a diagnosed narcissist - but I worry that maybe, long term, she's right. Truthfully though, I just -can't- approach new people, small talk, get them to like me, whatever. I'm just terrible at the dating and friend "game." Such is life. Maybe someday I'll luck out and meet a girl who has similar issues...so we can at least understand each other. Sometimes I think that was the biggest problem in my past relationships. They never really understood me...sometimes I wonder if they even tried.

Date: 2014-02-13 12:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sathor.livejournal.com
That book is awesome. I've read to Breaking Free Activity #9. Of course i'm not doing the activities (yet) but it's letting me think about things and my self in a completely different way, which is great. That's the kind of thing I live for. It's why I read philosophy, especially classical (because the perspectives they had then were different - but also because much of their insight applies very much so today.) There are things I disagree with, of course (I am very critical of anything I read, especially in self-help - mainly because this is an area which isn't complete empirical science.) For instance, "failing to live up to their full potential" as a trait of Nice Guys is a very interesting claim, mainly because it can't be objectively validated in any case, except by maybe God or Fate. There are geniuses and PHD holders who are homeless, for whatever reasons, there are incredibly talented people who never make a dime off of that talent, and we can't say with certainty that these people failed to live up to their full potential because there are myriad variables involved in the entirety of their lives, many of which, likely a majority, which were completely out of their control (Mark Twain "What Is Man" comes to mind again.) I wouldn't even say that Nice Guyness is a realistic reason for not living up to potentials - I think it's the nature of life in general, and probably could be left out of the list of traits without any real effect on the value of the text. It almost feels like a scare tactic - what do you think?

I often think about how modern society and media influences our psychology - and by no means do I think that our times and experiences are unintended side-effects of the media, either. I think there was intention and deliberate design involved (genetic/class warfare, eugenics, propaganda.) I just pointed out to my mother the other night, some random sitcom - Bad Girls i think? Every teenage girl in the school as they panned through the halls had the perfect body image. Not one was anorexic or even somewhat overweight, acne ridden or without makeup.

I like how you framed my last relationship, I think that's accurate and an important change in description. I also wanted to point out (in response to some of the other comments) that I did actually pop the question to two of my exes. I would count the first as well, but we were very young and I feel like that was more or less late teenage innocence, even if the relationship did last as long as it did. I gave a ring to one of those exes, which I had to get back shortly thereafter (showing up at her place of work because she made it impossible for me to contact her any other way) and with the latter we both agreed we'd wait until she graduated from college. Obviously that didn't quite work out - she didn't want to have kids either, which was a bit of a downer, yes - although I am still not quite sure I'm anywhere close to being ready to handle that.

I'm glad you don't find my writing too self-centered - I've worried about it for a long time, but this is the way my voice has developed. Even in verbal conversation I find I'm constantly checking myself to see if I'm speaking too much about myself (instead of delving for more information from someone who has said or described something, I will often describe a situation or experience of my own that i've deemed similar instead - whether that's normal or not, I don't know, but I do it a -lot-, on the plus side, it keeps my memory sharp because I'm always bringing up past experiences and linking them to presently received knowledge.)

I like you quite a bit, too :) Your dating advice seems right on the money and much more down to earth than anything else I've ever come across. So very refreshing, maybe what I needed. Although I'm not quite sure I'm ready to start looking anyway - I think there's a lot of self discovery I have yet to perform.

Hope your livejournal works right soon, and hope you're having a wonderful week :)

Date: 2014-02-13 09:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elenbarathi.livejournal.com
Yay, I'm glad you're finding the book helpful! All self-help books have to be taken with a grain of salt - each book is just one person's perspective, after all, even if it is a person with experience and expertise in the topic. I find that reading self-help books and employing the practices in them keeps me focused on 'right effort' - if I'm having a hard time dealing with some aspect of my life, instead of fretting about it I can seek insight about what might be causing the problem and what I can do to fix it.

About "living up to one's potential", two converging lines of thought. There's a person in some book, asked if she considers someone a lucky man, who laughs and says "If you live a long time and get most of what you wanted, I'll say you were lucky." So say it's within everyone's potential to be lucky like that; "living up to one's potential" would mean maximizing one's chances of succeeding.

Converging from the other direction: society's idea of what Success means: the job the car the suit the 'look' the babe the house the yacht.... Yeah right. Compare and contrast Richard Cory and the poet in Max Ehrmann's poem A Tradesman and a Poet". On the other hand, Kliban's cartoon Wasted and Useful Lives looks to me like two different kinds of waste.

Therefore, I would say consider 'your potential' to be your capacity to get what you want in life and to leave the world a better place than you found it. Up to you to define what you want, and what comprises 'better'. Up to you to define what living up to that potential would mean, and only you will ever know how much you do it. It's your life.

Heh, yeah, the media's effect was all planned. Vance Packard's books laid it on the line half a century ago, in popular and affordable paperback format. But the physical perfection of the girls in TV shows reflects the actual demographics of Hollywood: the place is swarming with chic little starlets who came there hoping to be Stars. If you ever see a genuine (not staged) crowd in Hollywood, check it out: they really do look like that. The people on sit-coms are those who won the casting-call auditions, so they're the ones who stood out in an already unusually-pretty crowd. Of course they're all made-up; they're TV actors.

So you've had three relationships of sufficient duration to propose, and one actual engagement? That sounds promising; I know guys your age who've never had a relationship last more than six months. But it also doesn't sound like any of them had much potential for a successful marriage, and I'm wondering if, in retrospect, you hung in there too long, settling for less than you really wanted because you thought it was the best you could get?

One of the characteristics common to Aspies is less use of gendered speech patterns. When you do experience-matching, some people probably mistake it for self-referentiality just because you're a man, and thus they don't exoect you to be trying to convey empathy verbally.

*grins* Glad to be helpful! Seems like right now, you're working so hard on your life that dating would only be a distraction, but the day will come.

Hope your week is wonderful too; be well!







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