tooshytosay
Well-known member
One of the most memorable comments I've heard from the disability community is this - that so often what makes them suffer is not the disability in itself, but the way society reacts to, and discriminates against, their disability.
And this is how I feel about SA too. In today's world we're just given so much flak for being so "quiet" and "shy". Everyone asks you "what is wrong with you?" Everyone chooses to feel super-uncomfortable in the presence of a very quiet / shy person. Everyone thinks the world will be better off without these "misfits" that don't fit in the grand scheme of an extroverted, bubbly, talkative, world.
In our social lives, in our work lives, in fact in all aspects of our lives, we're discriminated against for being that shy and quiet person.
Sometimes when I think of things like CBT I wonder if everyone en masse needs a dose of it. For what, if any, is "inherently wrong" with being shy and quiet? Even if such behaviours do have its negative aspects (just as extroverted and "loud" behaviours have their negative aspects), could it justify the discrimination imposed upon such individuals, pushing them to the boundaries of society and often driving them into depression and self-hate?
Would anxiety even matter if people didn't "care" about it so much? So what if you were seen as super-nervous and anxious if people were willing to accept you for being who you are instead of being so eager to discriminate against you and exclude you?
And this is how I feel about SA too. In today's world we're just given so much flak for being so "quiet" and "shy". Everyone asks you "what is wrong with you?" Everyone chooses to feel super-uncomfortable in the presence of a very quiet / shy person. Everyone thinks the world will be better off without these "misfits" that don't fit in the grand scheme of an extroverted, bubbly, talkative, world.
In our social lives, in our work lives, in fact in all aspects of our lives, we're discriminated against for being that shy and quiet person.
Sometimes when I think of things like CBT I wonder if everyone en masse needs a dose of it. For what, if any, is "inherently wrong" with being shy and quiet? Even if such behaviours do have its negative aspects (just as extroverted and "loud" behaviours have their negative aspects), could it justify the discrimination imposed upon such individuals, pushing them to the boundaries of society and often driving them into depression and self-hate?
Would anxiety even matter if people didn't "care" about it so much? So what if you were seen as super-nervous and anxious if people were willing to accept you for being who you are instead of being so eager to discriminate against you and exclude you?