and, i'm thinking about my issues with eye contact. it was what i
initially wanted to talk to a psychiatrist about, before i got diagnosed
with...well, i guess they got me to social anxiety disorder in the end,
which is more along the right lines. but, i never expected it to be
declared a disability and to entitle me to a monthly check; i was
thinking it was something i could get some therapy regarding.
part
of the argument i used to get my extension, which i haven't posted
anywhere yet, was a cost-benefit analysis of treatment v. acceptance. it
was a catch-22 themed essay that argued that i might seem perfectly ok
right now, but if you take me off the odsp then i won't seem ok anymore.
i concluded that i ought to be grounded. but, i acknowledged that a
significant investment with morally questionable techniques could
resolve the issue - even if you had to chain me down and lock me up to
administer it.
what i'm wondering right now is whether that's really true.
i
avoid almost all eye contact. it's really only when i want somebody to
do something for me that i can muster up the courage to look somebody in
the eye; it's that aggressive of a gesture, for me. it's clearly not
such an aggressive gesture for others.
is that learned, or instinctual?
the
earliest memories i have with eye contact are feelings of almost panic
due to a desire to avoid confrontation. so, i don't have memories of any
theoretical causes, but only memories of effects. the thing is that it
goes back very far, to that murky early grade school period; it could be
because i changed schools in grade 3, or because i had a concussion
shortly afterwards, but i would be almost hopeless in differentiating
between events that happened between when i was four and when i was 7.
it's quite young, though.
i remember that when people
looked at me in the eye, i would become fearful that an argument or
fight was about to start. it was just an act of pure aggression. so, i
found myself avoiding eye contact both to counter the aggression of
others and to prevent others from thinking i was behaving aggressively.
it
sounds like i'm talking about an antelope. and, maybe i am in the sense
that i have some native american genes. i'm exhibiting behaviour
regarding eye contact that is normal in some indigenous cultures, but i
haven't been conditioned into any of those cultures. perhaps therapy may
be less effective then i'd like to think.
i've liked
to think i'm not irreversibly broken; that i could be fixed, but that
the investment would be at a loss. and maybe what i'm pointing to only
necessitates therapy, rather than negates it's use. but maybe i'm
uncovering somewhat of an unrealized truth, whatever it's scale.