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Establishing boundaries versus explaining yourself.

  • Posted on October 16, 2009

Most adults probably establish personal boundaries automatically and therefore take that skill for granted. Only those who don’t do so, know how much of a challenge it is to discern the often times subtle difference between creating and maintaining boundaries versus explaining and defending yourself. Without experience, there will be many mistakes in how, when, and where boundary building is done.

I can only guess that most neurotypicals have no problem with immediately discerning and applying the ideal incremental value of sternness necessary to get respect from the person they’re relating with. I’m sure how one is raised has a lot to do with how good s/he is at getting respected by others.

Being that I have the typical ‘all or nothing’ Aspie mind, I tend to bring out a bag of bricks by the time I notice that others are not seeing my boundaries. The trespassers are then shocked by the hard force I hit them with, because they didn’t heed the multiple gentle breezes warning them to keep off my tender territory.

The only motive I have to improve my social skills is survival. I’ve stopped expecting friendships.  Generally speaking, (from what I experience) most people do not care enough to understand how not to take as much offense as they do. I (almost always) fail to get people to respect me.

When I give hints, the hints are ignored. When I am straightforward, then I am avoided. At least my boundaries are not crossed anymore. Plus, I don’t have to put up with feeling like my words have no meaning. I know I’m somebody when I make such an impact that people work to avoid me.

That sure doesn’t typically happen in the case when an Aspie adult is practicing how to gain respect from socially seasoned individuals. Instead, what happens is the opposite, especially when an inexperienced Aspie establishes boundaries.

More often than not, when people violate our boundaries it’s because we have let them and when we try to establish them after the fact, these people may themselves take offense, which in turn can result in a negative response.

Last Monday’s post Explanations destroy respect? maybe should have been written as a book instead. It’s very, very difficult for me to put my thoughts into brief words knowing how differently they will be interpreted because of the infinite variety of people there are on the internet. I could write books, but they’d never be ready for publication. I’d never finish editing them thanks to continuously having new thoughts from new information. Add to that, its chapters would be as disorganized as my posts.

Why do people assume someone enjoys writing if they’re not getting paid to do it? I don’t get paid money to blog and I usually don’t enjoy it either. I don’t need to explain. My statement is either accepted or its not, just like mostly everything else I say. I also don’t enjoy being so blunt and/or harsh as much as I am. I’m tempted to say why I’m not as gentle as I once was, but I won’t.

Purposeful Boundaries

  • Posted on May 21, 2008

Even though I’m not writing about Asperger’s syndrome today, the message can easily be applied to both AS and neurotypical syndrome people. My last activity yesterday, before retiring for sleep, happened to be caused by deciding where to relocate a dusty little red book on one of my shelves. I almost always go through such things whenever I’ve acquired a new book. It’s like defragging my hard drive so the Windows operating system can find files faster, since they’re more organized then. Excessive explanation? Not really. It’s to show God can work in strange ways even if they seem trivial.

The little red book (← a pun is there folks!) I’m referring to is titled The Book of Prayers: Compiled for Everyday Worship. It was published in 1981 by Avenel Books in New York and edited by Leon and Elfreda McCauley. Most people would glean through its pages and think it to be dull. Maybe I did too, since I never paid much attention to it during the quarter of a century that it’s been sitting on my shelf.

Anyhow, earlier last evening, I had been brought down in spirits because of being reminded of the harsh realities Aspies face in regards to employment due to how illogical (insane) the work force scene is. It came from the book Theory of Mind and the Triad of Perspectives on Autism and Asperger Syndrome: A View from the Bridge by Olga Bogdashina (more specifically from Temple Grandin’s statements repeated on page 158):

“Many people with autism expect all people to be good. It is a rude awakening to learn that some people are bad and might try to exploit them. AS people often cannot hold down jobs as they are unable (and often unwilling) to ‘play social games’. They are straightforward (not rude). They cannot accept that ‘know-who (to please)’ is more important than ‘know-how (to do the job)’.”

If all people lived to please God, then the work force scene would be logical and sane instead. Oh well, that’s for the new earth — for now, there is still work to be done in this present one. Even though I enjoy most of the work I do,¹ in spite of not getting paid and never receiving encouragement or praise for it, I don’t enjoy being constantly compared to and judged against the lifestyles of ‘normal’ women today.

Enough said about what brought me down; now to what elevated me! Page 28, of the prayer book, contained one called For a Purposeful Life. These are the words which blessed me with the same peace that children acquire from knowing their boundaries given to them from loving parents for their protection:

“When we have found life good, O Lord, we have asked for longer days; when we have found it heavy, we have asked for a lighter load. Teach us to accept whatever comes to us as useful cargo freighted with possible blessing. Help us to wrest a blessing from circumstance, to work with thee in making all things work together for good because we will to live according to thy purpose. Amen.”

Living according to God’s purpose, rather than according to what I want God’s purpose to be for me, is a comfort zone that no prescribed medication can offer. I should know that by now. It must go to show that knowing is not the same thing as humbly abiding in that knowledge.

I don’t know what other blessings lay ahead from the prayers in this book, but I’m eager to find out. The introduction The Strength of Personal Prayer by Harry Emerson Fosdick is loaded with profound statements. I shall summarize this post with a portion from page 4:

“There are two aspects to every strong life—rootage and fruitage, receptivity and activity, relaxation and tension, resting back and working hard. A man who cannot do the former can never do the latter well, never! He who cannot rest, cannot work; he who cannot let go, cannot hold on; he who cannot find footing, cannot go forward. The offices of psychiatrists are littered with folk who have mastered the techniques of activity and aggressiveness and now are going all to pieces because they have failed to master that other technique: they have nothing to rest back upon.”

¹It’s the household engineering duties that can be a drag, but then when I feel that way, I know what’s in need of readjustment (me). Being thankful is the cure for most everything → the greatest is being spared from eternal annihilation!

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