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This post mentions something in the title,, but it is not about this particular college-level Math course. I have good reasons to be worried about this class, but I am passing. I had to work hard to get there. I am more worried -that because my grade stands at 69.9%, that I'l lose funding because of Vocational Rehabilitation's rules. In any case, this should be brought up with my teacher. (And I did voice some things out of frustration, but I've tried to be more positive about it, but saying it's the last math class I'll probably ever have to take in my life didn't help things here. I am not applying the lessons I learned with Mrs. Boonie, my 8th grade art teacher. While I'll never be a professional artist, she did not need to constantly know how much I hated the class and how useless I thought it was. The D I got in that class may have been unfair, but it was completely understandable.)
As an indirect result of this class, and details I won't gloss over, I'm going to institute some new personal policies.
1.) Do not divide attention between topics when talking to someone. Human brains are not designed for multi-tasking.
2.) Do not try to communicate important concepts to people, Lara, when you know your brain is fried. (This includes when you wake up ten times during the night and did not sleep well.)
If I may go on to other ramblings, I've wondered about something. If someone tells me a problem, my first instinct is to offer a solution, whether it's asked for or not. I don't think this is entirely a socialized as male thing, although men tend to interact with each other this way. Some part of me feels this phrasing is sexist, but it is not my fault that our parents try to raise us in certain gender roles and society later reinforces them. I've also seen too many TERFs use this idea in a harmful way. I can sometimes realize people aren't looking for solutions. Sometimes I do not. is it the computer background that causes me to do this or is it just a misunderstanding on my part? (Likely the latter, and a lot of autism thrown in.)
Not that everything here is due to autism. Sometimes I just don't think I realize how I might be coming off. Laying guilt trips on people is something I don't want to do. (If I didn't like my mother or younger brother doing it to me, other people probably don't like me laying guilt trips on them. This is just simple logic.)
Also, I learned the phrase alexithymic.
As an indirect result of this class, and details I won't gloss over, I'm going to institute some new personal policies.
1.) Do not divide attention between topics when talking to someone. Human brains are not designed for multi-tasking.
2.) Do not try to communicate important concepts to people, Lara, when you know your brain is fried. (This includes when you wake up ten times during the night and did not sleep well.)
If I may go on to other ramblings, I've wondered about something. If someone tells me a problem, my first instinct is to offer a solution, whether it's asked for or not. I don't think this is entirely a socialized as male thing, although men tend to interact with each other this way. Some part of me feels this phrasing is sexist, but it is not my fault that our parents try to raise us in certain gender roles and society later reinforces them. I've also seen too many TERFs use this idea in a harmful way. I can sometimes realize people aren't looking for solutions. Sometimes I do not. is it the computer background that causes me to do this or is it just a misunderstanding on my part? (Likely the latter, and a lot of autism thrown in.)
Not that everything here is due to autism. Sometimes I just don't think I realize how I might be coming off. Laying guilt trips on people is something I don't want to do. (If I didn't like my mother or younger brother doing it to me, other people probably don't like me laying guilt trips on them. This is just simple logic.)
Also, I learned the phrase alexithymic.
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Date: 2017-04-23 10:58 pm (UTC)In a support group, people aren't looking for solutions, generally, especially if they have something for which there is no cure, even if it isn't ultimately fatal. They've probably heard it all before. I'm not sure that giving unwanted advice is always abusive, but there are times when it is simply rude. (I'm also not sure I'm responding to the right person here.) It's just a matter of learning when and where it is appropriate and applying context. For example, if I ever make it back into the workforce, if the boss comes up to me saying, "Why isn't our web server working?" He doesn't want me to say "Gee, that's terrible." He wants me to diagnose the problem and fix it. Someone who just got diagnosed with a chronic illness or who is living with it doesn't need advice.
But it's also a matter of listening and picking up on social cues. If that can't be done, I can at least listen to what the person wants.
I know I've gotten advice on fibnoromyalgia (and fortunately none on EDS) from various non-medical sources. Some people are mean. Some people mean well. I have to throw both types of advice away. It's not that the latter type of people don't care. It's just that I know their advice won't work. Sometimes, I've already tried it.
And as one doctor put it, getting to the diagnosis of EDS is like going down a rabbit hole. I still don't know how deep it is. Fortunately, Hashimoto's Disease, for the most part is treated by taking a pill. (Then there are all the pills for the conditions that seem to come with EDS-HT along with the physical therapy.)
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Date: 2017-04-23 11:41 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-04-24 02:11 am (UTC)I think I may have assumed you knew information that perhaps you did not.
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Date: 2017-04-24 02:18 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2017-04-24 02:44 am (UTC)