not sure wrote: ↑Mon Jan 02, 2023 10:58 am
another aspect is the people you work with and your direct boss
in any career/job choice - if you work with people who you can call your friends, everything else is better
Something to keep in mind when interviewing, or even choosing a work path - what kinds of people it attracts..
Yes! I already knew that the work environment was important, but didn't think as far as how the work field attracts certain types of people. I think I'd like the people working with me as a adventure park operator. I'm not sure about the caregiver field, because there's more differences between institutions while most adventure parks are the same.
@RoamingFrancis
Thank you for your journal! I'm still reading but many many of the concepts I like were introduced by you. I'll answer in yours as soon as I'm finished reading. I'll read Laura's blog more in detail when I'll be done writing so much. I'm a big talker, sorry (see lower).
RoamingFrancis wrote: ↑Wed Jan 04, 2023 3:49 am
How long have you been with your partner? I have finally been feeling ready to date for the first time in my life and am curious to hear other people's stories.
Regarding to romantic relationships, I can see from your journal and other posts that you have a tendency to overanalyze things. I say that because, like you said, we are very similar, and I do feel like I often think too much.
Anyway, I've been with her for a little bit more than a year now. She the second romantic partner I had in my life.
Between age 15 and 18 I was obsessed with getting in a relationship with no success. I felt like finding a relationship would provide the comfort needed to endure the day to day school grind. It was between 16-18 that my focus shifted to hobo life as a cure to my looking for meaning. Still I felt like a relationship would be a nice sugar! In retrospection, a lot of the relationship that I tried to get would've been likely very casual, because very few people shared common interests with me, or at least, mental tolerance for my radical lifestyle/views. I'm not so sad to have missed on them, but I would have benefited from more emotional and sexual intelligence if I've had a relationship earlier.
So, I signed up on Tinder at age 18, where I met my first partner with whom I ended up for about a year and a half. I believe we were sincerely in love (whatever that means, times fixes everything anyway), but also radically different. She was kind of a careerist and had emotional issues which I was bad with dealing with (you said you are neurodiverse and probably so am I, thus sometimes a bit too honest and cold)*. She wanting stability, and me wanting to travel and constantly repeating that I'd leave for a year as soon as I'm done and that I won't be able to call weekly was really the nail in the coffin of our dysfunctional relationship.
*Everyone in the family around me is obsessed with ADHD, autism spectrum and high potential testing, both for themselves and me. While I believe that there are different people in society, thus different ways to work, and that society is dominated by the neurotypical way of working, I don't want to be diagnosed just so I can get medication to adapt to society.
I also hear a lot that it can help me know myself better, and this is true, but I already know my personality traits enough that I can live my life happily. If you need a diagnosis to understand why you don't like something instead of putting the blame on yourself, no problem, I understand, but I don't. I've read in this forum about
iatrogenesis, and trying to overly adapt oneself to one's diagnosed mentality is probably an example of it (or maybe not, and I just want to namedrop this). If I'm happy and others around me are, then I am fine. Just need to make sure in a while: "Am I fine? Yes I feel fine. Do you feel fine? Yes, thank you.".
Also, why is everyone here so obsessed with the MBTI? It's just so vague it doesn't make any sense. But rant is over, let's move back to topic.
I have, surprisingly, a bit matured now. So when I got in the current relationship I am now in, I kept repeating that I was a bad lover, because I never communicate if away, and I will follow through my projects no matter what. What a bad idea to get in a relationship with me, better be ready! But actually, SO moved in and life is so easy going that I know it's worthy of a lot of compromises. She knows too and I believe that's a very very very important quality for a relationship. Of course, the ideal compromise is the one that doesn't feel like one! So when she decided to stay in Switzerland for studying, I decided to stay there to make money instead of traveling. I could say it's actually the reason I'm on this forum right now.
More about the dating rather than the actual relationship: we met through a friend who was in love with her, and it sort of just happened—I lost one of my best friendship and got a romantic partner. It was maybe a bad bet at first since I didn't know her very well, but I was very impulsive and got very lucky as is often the case in life
. I don't regret it, but I could have, had she been less the best partner I could aim to get. I believe I'm very bad with dating because if I have interest in a girl, I act weird and generally lack the confidence to build a friendship until I take gigantic steps, whom, in the past, had the effect of scaring the girl away if she wasn't already interested in me. This is why Tinder helped at first because you'd show interest before actually socializing. This increased my confidence and I was just more natural in return. Now, I've heard a lot of stories of guys just putting their hands on the girl leg or leaning in for a kiss without a clue, just because they got a match so "this must be it, right?".
All in all, I've, at some point, just accepted that I was clueless instead of trying to analyze whether that smile was a good one or not. Instead, I'm just acting natural, and if I don't feel like socializing but really want to, I can always drink more alcohol. Current SO said she was actively flirting with me and that I was also constantly flirting with her. Thinking back on the first times we met, I was just a bit more silent than the norm, and smiling confidently to people, mostly because I didn't feel the need to be cool. I had no expectations which made me very much natural and open. That's with the input I now got from her that I say that, but honestly I feel like she did all the hard job!
Concretely, she said once that "she'd like to know me more in depth", and that was sincerely a good yet simple clue. Another time, she said she was going to visit family in another country:
— "Oh! I'm going on a trip in this region at the same dates, how cool it would be to meet in your town" (also, but not only, thinking pragmatically about couchsurfing).
— "Yeah sure, would be fun." (her not really thinking that'd happen).
Fast forward a month, I call her—"300km from your town, I'll be there this evening, where do we meet?". We meet, we talk, we're two in another town, we touch hands, we hug, we kiss.
I say she did all the work, she says I was cocky. I think I was impulsive.
I don't say I can give advice as I am clueless—"good thing, because I didn't ask!" you might say—, but if you meet someone you like spending time with and would like to spend more time with them, just tell them this! I guess romantic relations are a mix of friendship and sex, so you can also tell them that they look good and that they're very pretty/handsome (seems like the adjective is important depending on gender). Then hug them when you leave (best is to do this with everyone anyway
). If you want "only sex" like some do, I have no clue, because I never got "only sex" (not that I never wanted). I guess you must either be drunk, or in a group of very open minded people to have this.
RoamingFrancis wrote: ↑Wed Jan 04, 2023 3:49 am
I have honestly only done really long hitchhiking adventures where I have been on the road for months. Could be cool to do shorter ones that are a little less grueling. I lived in a squat for a little while so I could meditate full-time but then I got kicked out. Are any of the abandoned places you encountered healthy? Some of the scenes I have seen like that seemed to have a lot of substance abuse going on which I really prefer to avoid. And interpersonal challenges usually destroy those sorts of experiments.
Longest was only a month and a half for me. I like coming home more often that I thought. When HH was too tiring, I'd couchsurf for a few days before leaving again. Staying at someone's place is something I could probably do more. But when I was staying at SO's family for weeks, I was sooo bored! So maybe WWOOFing or in a natural location with plenty of hikes would work better.
Abandoned places, healthy? You just need to find a nice one! I guess you meant squats. In this case, you also need to find a nice one! I've seen squats with lot of drugs and others that were really low-profile, low blood sugar, calm people who just don't like the concept of rent and like communal living. I'm a bit obsessed with stuff and I feel like there's always to much mess around in squats, and it's a bit dirty and the electricity isn't safe and people should wash dishes more, and why is this old yogurt still there, I told you to pick it up! Maybe once I'll be more relaxed.