If you care about a person, even a little, talk to them once in a while.

Personal gripe time: I have severe RSD, I am autistic, I suffer from depression, and don't even get me started on being queer and trans.

It took me years and years and YEARS to heal from the assumption that people barely tolerate me. That I have to justify my existence, that any time I interact with a person it's a chore for them.

I still often believe that. And I am luckier than most. I am not saying that to be coy or to downplay things. I have people who tell me, again and again, that they care about me and they want me and they want me around.

And yet it's still exhausting that most friendships and semi-friendships I maintain require active effort. In most cases, people who do not generally MIND being around me, who like talking to me, who value me still need to be prodded into interaction.

If I talk to them, they respond. If I don't, they do not. Sometimes ever. Sometimes "only" for years or months.

Now, to a person like me this is emotional labour. I have to FORCE myself to believe that I am not doing violence to people just by existing around them.

And it eats me up inside that there have only ever been a handful of people who chat me up with some regularity, to let me know they think about me, to just have a short conversation and go about their days. Not to mention people who want to hang out or whatever.

It is possible you are reading this and are confused. Why is that a big deal? If I like people, why would I not want to talk to them?

I want to. I just sometimes can't. Look at the CW of this post again. Some people are built different.

If you have a person in your life that is autistic (or otherwise neurodivergent), who is queer, who is marginalised in some ways (especially in ways that can make interacting in person more difficult, like being disabled), who has a history of trauma, who has depression or RSD or any sort of mental issue that makes it difficult to initiate interaction...

...fucking TALK to them. It may seem like not a big deal to you, but that's precisely because it is less effort for you. You may think they know you like or love them, but even if they do, it takes effort to remember that.

Just go through your social contacts or your mental list of friends, and chat with a person today. You don't need a reason. Only neurotypicals require reasons /hj

No matter how much you may think such a little gesture helps, you are STILL underestimating its impact.

The few people who consistently poked and prodded at me and went "hey, how have you been?" have sometimes been a lifesaver. Occasionally I'm pretty sure I mean that literally.

I feel guilty because I didn't reciprocate for some of them. I was so exhausted by trying to maintain other friendships and not let them wither away, I neglected people who were more active because I just had no energy left. And yes, I know I perpetuated what I myself dislike.

Just, talk to a person. Ask to grab a coffee or beer, or to have a walk, or just talk to them on Discord or whatever. If it's easy for you, just do it.

Not every second of your life, not even regularly. But if you feel like it and you have the energy and five minutes to spare? Do it.

Yes, five minutes can be a lot to such a person.

Please Boost this if you're mentally healthy, neurotypical and doing OK. If you don't... please also Boost it, but I know some of y'all will, because y'all KNOW what I am talking about xD

@oddtail I know. Thank you.
This applies also to people who are not "visibly neurodivergent". It can manifest in subtle ways. You may not know how much effort it requires of your friend to initiate contact. So, if you like somebody, just talk to them sometimes...
@oddtail I know exactly what you're talking about unfortunately
@oddtail it's not quite as bad for us, but we're at the point where if we have to initiate interaction a few times and they never do we eventually just stop trying. it's too exhausting. we already tend to initiate interaction more than most of our friends, we can't always be the one doing it with nearly everyone we know.
@oddtail for a long time we thought we were bad at maintaining relationships. until we realized that almost none of the people we lost contact with had ever tried to stay in touch. they talked to us when it was convenient and stopped as soon as it wasn't. we're fine without those kinds of "friends".

@oddtail

hey, how have you been?

personally to me, personally, this is a nightmare of a question. too vague to make up a good answer to, yet leaves you feeling like an asshole if you refuse to

this sort of purposeless question is worse than being left alone. sure, infodump at me about interesting things, don't burden me with having to come up with something to say when there's nothing

@oddtail if I may add something on the “why didn’t you say anything”:

the idea of actually sharing those fears and needs with someone and asking for anything can feel like being (or at best, coming across as) an ungrateful, needy annoyance. one that is bound to drive people away when they get fed up with this. so it feels safer to just stay quiet.

/erin

@erin

Completely true, yes.

Thanks for this excellent writeup, @oddtail, and what @erin says is also so relevant.
I have only recently even heard of RSD (yay self-discovery), but I seem to still have to read up a lot on it, and how to deal with it. Because it is exactly that, I focus on all the little “rejections”, and try to come up with reasons for them, but am afraid to address it, because it feels weird to bring up…
@crypticcelery @oddtail @erin This. All the little rejections that leave you endlessly wondering what you did wrong

@crypticcelery
Hmmm, im not sure if its "RSD" if you are actually getting rejected as in blocked and banned (opposite to not trying to ask because fearing they might reject you)

@oddtail @erin

@Laberpferd I was referring to offline interactions, and definitely a component of reading too much into it. So I think it applies.
@crypticcelery oh i explicitly meant online AND offline experience, because in both cases the same thing happens
@oddtail This is really good. I was slightly led astray by "PSA" because at first I thought you were explaining something called PSA. I'm really bad at TLAs, :-) so saying "Public Service Announcement" would have been better (if only for me.)
@oddtail I'm an extravert, but neither mentally healthy, neurotypical, nor doing OK. Given how little capacity I have, it already feels like it's my day job maintaining contact with my ~20 or so friends.

It's easy to pick up new friends, but as natural as it feels to me to give those friends love it's challenging to give each friendship as much attention as I want to.

I know you're not talking directly to me, and I recognize the feeling of RSD tho to a lesser degree than you do, but I still feel the need to verbalize that it feels somewhat frustrating to be asked to "just fucking do more" (paraphrased).

For what it's worth from my own perspective, if it can be reassuring to anyone, I
always appreciate being contacted, and if I'm not in a state to talk with someone, that's my own responsibility to set that boundary and not something the other party should ever feel bad about.

@starlightsys

Thank you for your comment.

I did go out of my way to specify people should do more if they have the time, energy to and they feel capable of doing it.

Do you think that was unclear? If so, I'd appreciate any advice on how to communicate that better.

@oddtail It might be my autistic way of reading the CW but I felt like I was being targeted. That's all I can think of at the moment.

Sorry for the slow reply, it kind of vanished in among a lot of other notifications
​ I'm very sensitive to "active silence" myself and never want to expose others to that.

@oddtail what i lovely and heartrending/ heartwarming message that I and I think many others needed to hear 💚

In terms of the difficult issue of spoons, ive really treasured the couple friendships where I, either as the struggling one or the one reaching out, could just text a meaningful emoji to me like 🌿, as a way of saying 'im still here and i care about you' without the pressure of feeling like I have to give up my spoons by starting a conversation neither of us may have the capacity for. That may not work for everyone but ive found it really helpful.

@oddtail

I know what you are talking about. People write me off, it's a fact of life. I am just too tired to make an effort, because I have always been making an effort. I am not ever going to be neurotypical but the onus is always on me it seems, which sucks!

@oddtail I admit, I feel like I can relate to this a lot, as someone with autism and ADHD and is too afraid to talk to people