Autism, Isolation & Misanthropy

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 26 พ.ย. 2024

ความคิดเห็น • 629

  • @Ember_Green
    @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +298

    If u relate to this video PLEASE share it. TH-cam is already starting to stop showing it to people.
    Also, this video is categorically not telling anyone to force themselves to socialize. It's about not hating humanity itself & how hard it can be to build community while things are so bad for everyone.

    • @elen5871
      @elen5871 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      popped up for me and wow am I glad, it's putting into words a lot of shit I haven't been able to put into words. the job history stuff, lmao. _too_ relatable.

    • @elen5871
      @elen5871 ปีที่แล้ว +10

      oh my god i just got to "we must appreciate in society, what society never appreciated in us," this was like. the key to everything. you put this so beautifully. i really take to heart this quote by che guevara, it's kinda what helped me get over the hump of "fuck everyone and everything," and i especially love the self-consciousness of it:
      “At the risk of seeming ridiculous, let me say that the true revolutionary is guided by a great feeling of love. It is impossible to think of a genuine revolutionary lacking this quality.”

    • @FarceeTheFire
      @FarceeTheFire ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I've never related more to something, I feel so seen

    • @tudormiller887
      @tudormiller887 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Watching from London UK.❤

    • @commonsense3921
      @commonsense3921 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      I love everything about this video.

  • @jn1211
    @jn1211 ปีที่แล้ว +251

    "I can't even hold my camera up in public"
    I legit feel this in my bones. even when I'm just looking at my phone, if the camera portion isn't covered by the case or my fingers I feel an extreme sense of anxiety

    • @pricklypear300
      @pricklypear300 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      oh my dear donuts. This is so 100% me.

    • @moondvst4131
      @moondvst4131 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Same

  • @BrigitteEmpire
    @BrigitteEmpire ปีที่แล้ว +246

    This resonated so hard, especially in regard to the work situation, these spaces just aren’t designed for neurodivergent people and it took so long for me to stop blaming myself for struggling so hard to keep jobs that I physically couldn’t stand

    • @QueerSweetness
      @QueerSweetness ปีที่แล้ว +7

      Yeah, it really sux total ass! I feel lost af at work... tryna connect with other ppl, but, while they act like they lile me, the really dont.

    • @nUmBskulLL
      @nUmBskulLL ปีที่แล้ว

      What do you do now?

  • @lanzinator4734
    @lanzinator4734 ปีที่แล้ว +400

    I was only formally diagnosed this week, at the age of 34. As someone who was also broken down working in the service industry for years, during that segment of your video I caught myself thinking "God, if only I had figured this out sooner like she did." Of course, by the conclusion I realized, with a combination of relief, hope and existential dread, that the takeaway from this video is demonstrably different. :)

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +51

      congrats on finding some answers! i'm working on a "diagnosis process" video atm!

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I think the "oh god had i o,ething somthig soonrer isat athat point the normal reaction, if ther is a normal. not really elpful pondr what if, but i think its "normal"
      solitary greetings , not seen the video yet

    • @Banzai8th
      @Banzai8th ปีที่แล้ว +8

      Also a very late diagnosis, as well as the queer community, I've found a lot of joy in the ASD/neurodivergent community.

    • @robinfox4440
      @robinfox4440 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      I just hate how the service industry is basically the only option for so many people, and autistic people are so frequently underemployed we end up in those positions that are worst for us, because the jobs that we would actually thrive in won't have us.

    • @ilubuuhehh2773
      @ilubuuhehh2773 ปีที่แล้ว

      YAAAYYY :>>>>

  • @Tottosmile
    @Tottosmile ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Being perceived is triggering to me because of the wat I felt perceived as a child. One way this manifests for me is being self conscious about buying particular foods if I think the people around me will know what I'm going to make with it. I hate feeling like people can know where I'm going. And it's strange too, I love people! I love community! And yet, I spend my entire life in my bed if I don't have anything planned. I'm at war with myself.

  • @Colorcrayons
    @Colorcrayons ปีที่แล้ว +69

    I want to say that I relate so heavily to every aspect of this video. I suffer from CPTSD, but after an entire life of being the "other", of being not a human, I am beginning to suspect that I may have deeper developmental issues that are impacting my life. If I hear one more person tell me I am too smart to have problems, I think I might snap. I even get that from my own therapist.
    It is really difficult to consider myself a Humanist, and yet despise the vast majority of humanity so sublimely. I hate my misanthropy, and yet it is a trauma reaction I have come to learn.
    I am the western equivalent of Hikokomori, leaving my home only to see my therapist.
    I experience the same difficulties in employment as you, in just as a myriad of employment selections as well. Everyone loves me in my job... until they don't. I guess that's masking.
    I hope nobody ever has to experience how difficult life is for those like us. it is definitely hard mode, and not anywhere remotely because of choice.
    Perhaps one day I shall find my communal ideal as philosophized by Epicurus. It is my dream. Just a small tribe of a dozen folks who help each other whom we can implicitly trust.
    I hope we all can find such solace. I hope you can get as close to your solace as possible.

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +9

      i hope u find your space. thank u so much for your comment.

    • @clicheguevara5282
      @clicheguevara5282 ปีที่แล้ว +7

      I understand you. I'm also "too smart", refer to myself as Hikikomori, and feel like a humanist - misanthrope paradox. I really only interact with people 2 days a week and live in a tiny rural town on an outer island in Hawaii because it allows me to be FAR away from the world. It was actually my C-PTSD diagnosis that led me to my autism diagnosis a few years ago. ...and now I'm finally starting to understand myself and my trauma on a deep enough level to make some positive changes.
      C-PTSD and Autism have a HUGE overlap in symptoms and are very often comorbidities. As deeply traumatic as my childhood was, I always told my therapist that being "the other" my whole life is what _really_ traumatized me. Later on, I learned that undiagnosed autistic adults are prime candidates for C-PTSD. A lifetime of masking when you don't even know what masking IS, can deeply traumatize a person. ..and since the symptoms of the two disorders are so similar, it's completely overwhelming. It's like getting a double dose of the symptoms such as hypervigilance, dissociation, and overstimulation. If you suspect that you may be on the spectrum or have a similar developmental disorder, I'd really encourage you to keep pursuing that topic.
      I really hope you're able to find some answers and relief. Suffering from C-PTSD while being totally isolated is HELL. I wouldn't wish it upon anyone.

  • @zoe_bee
    @zoe_bee ปีที่แล้ว +197

    This video spoke to me in ways I didn't know I needed to be spoken to. Sending you love, always 💜

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +25

      thank you Zoe - your comments mean so much, I was genuinely nervous about this one!

    • @starRushi
      @starRushi ปีที่แล้ว +9

      That's what you guys as TH-camrs do-- say things that people didn't know had to be said or needed to be heard. Thank you for calling out into the potential darkness and risking the idea that no one would care, because it's sure as hell a lot braver than what I could do. It's that exact bravery which I try to carry with me into my life and to face every problem I meet. I wish y'all could know how important videos like this one are to me.

  • @theov6525
    @theov6525 ปีที่แล้ว +66

    I’m autistic and I really struggle with the whole I don’t want to be perceived thing. I’m so self conscious of EVERYTHING I’m doing when I’m in public, constantly worrying about drawing attention to myself. I even have trouble making phone calls when my partner is around, even though I trust him completely and he is the safest person I have in my life. I’ve never heard anyone else talk about these kinds of struggles and I’m so grateful that you made this video. Knowing that other people have the same experiences makes me feel a little less alone, a little less like there’s something horribly wrong with me

    • @brianmeen2158
      @brianmeen2158 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I can relate to your anxiety when out in public. Pretty much the second I step outside my home I feel that social anxiety . Mowing the yard or doing anything outside can be downright stressful and even when it goes ok I still feel very drained afterwards .. I can take my dog for a 45 minute and I feel quite drained from that .. I cannot stand the anxiety I feel in public. My mother has it much worse than me . Ever take medication?
      Btw I also have that anxiety when I’m around a friend or family member and I call people on the phone. On my own it’s fine but with someone else there it makes me feel uneasy

    • @compressedst
      @compressedst 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      i relate exactly to this. even down to the partner part. you are not alone

  • @ashleyboots3386
    @ashleyboots3386 ปีที่แล้ว +137

    This one hits home.
    I used to be the same way - hiding in my room, analyzing every spoken word from strangers for reasons to feel guilty or ashamed for just existing in the same space with them, rejecting real opportunities to connect with others.
    I'm also a person who refuses to hide who I am, and indeed would often be a bit hardcore about making sure other people didn't disrespect me. At times, I was pretty toxic.
    This started changing once I began transitioning, and more so when I was officially diagnosed with ASD1 in 2019.
    But it wasn't until I lost everything in 2020 - fiancee, chosen family, home, dream job, hope - that I finally started taking my grab bag of neurodiversity and severe mental illness seriously, and I changed.
    I actually love people. And now that I've found myself, who I truly am, I'm more compassionate and kind (yes, even to clueless NTs), and I love to live out loud as I am.
    Not everyone can do that. So for those of you still on that journey, just know, I'm out here living unapologetically in the hope that all of us who can will help create a world where those still isolating, still feeling scared or confused or just plain exhausted, can choose to join us if that's what they want.
    Either way, you're valid, you're good, and I'm proud of you!! 💙

    • @franki1990
      @franki1990 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you for what you are doing.

    • @ashleyboots3386
      @ashleyboots3386 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@franki1990 💙

    • @m0thdm
      @m0thdm ปีที่แล้ว +1

      sending you love!

    • @ashleyboots3386
      @ashleyboots3386 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@m0thdm 💙💙💙

  • @ThatDangDad
    @ThatDangDad ปีที่แล้ว +128

    Beautiful piece, Mica. At the teen outreach I work with, many of the kids there will answer our icebreaker questions in ways that amount to "I want to be invisible" and I've always wondered if that was something generational, something particular to the LGBTQ+ community, or something else. But your video makes me reflect that a TON of the kids there are ND in various ways so it makes sense now from this perspective. Thanks for putting yourself out there!

    • @PosthumanHeresy
      @PosthumanHeresy ปีที่แล้ว +8

      There's a show from the 90s I suggest you watch, because it's extremely popular amongst a lot of neurodivergent and/or queer youth over being one of the most "this resonates" in regards to those desires. It's called Serial Experiments Lain. To pull a reference from elsewhere you may get, to understand a people, you must look at and understand their art. Lain is pretty OG when it comes to art in regards to neurodivergent people who wish to be invisible.

  • @pneumaticpterodactyl4015
    @pneumaticpterodactyl4015 ปีที่แล้ว +139

    I'm beginning to think I might have autism, and the things you're talking about are really helping. Thanks for helping remind me I'm not alone.

  • @UdderlyEvelyn
    @UdderlyEvelyn ปีที่แล้ว +40

    The embarrassment is very relatable, taking a selfie in front fo my partner even is mortifying.

  • @mistythemischievous2013
    @mistythemischievous2013 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    I've had a life where positive socialization was non-existent and I faced a ton of trauma. I'm aware I'm a misanthrope but... it's hard not to be. Add PTSD to the mix where "normal" society feels like an entirely different culture, and it furthers my isolation.. I'm just a plain misanthropic hermit at this point in my life and I'm not sure how I feel about it. I feel robbed...

  • @meowing_wolf
    @meowing_wolf ปีที่แล้ว +62

    I’ve always kind of loved people, even as I deeply feared them at the same time. The variety of things people can be is deeply fascinating, and I’d love nothing more than to just explore all the differences. That didn’t stop my social phobia from developing though. I end up wanting to just disappear from reality, feeling like I can’t truly belong. Exposing myself to social settings only seemed to make it worse over time. I still wouldn’t say I hate people, but I’m not sure if I love people anymore. I’m simply terrified, and if there’s anything I do hate it’s the fact that the world can do this to us.

  • @unclepecos91
    @unclepecos91 ปีที่แล้ว +115

    One of the most useful takeaways i got after my diagnosis was learning to give myself grace when i can't do something i find too hard.
    So please remember you don't HAVE to film a TikTok at a bus stop if it's too uncomfortable, especially beacuse you already manage to be seen and effective in your own majestically autistic way!
    But if you really want to prove yourself, good luck :)

    • @PirateQueen1720
      @PirateQueen1720 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      I agree.
      I think I come across as having quite low social anxiety, because part of how my autism manifests is not having the bandwidth to both engage in a social interaction AND worry about how I'm being perceived at the same time (I will freak out and over-analyze before or after, but mostly not during). However, different types of interactions take different amounts of energy.
      I HATED selling girl scout cookies; after much parental encouragement, I was persuaded to call 3-4 family friends instead of leaving the house. My one attempt at canvassing for a ballot initiative was resulted in 1 hour of psyching myself up and at least 3 hours of decompression time to go with 1 hr at the mall that gained 10 signatures. So anything involving approaching a stranger to "sell" them an idea or a project and repeating that sequence over and over is likely to be a disaster for me. Letter-writing for causes I care about (including voter turnout letters) is probably a better way for me to be involved!
      On the other hand, I've always been 100% fine with public presentations, because I can prepare what I'm going to say and I don't have to look at or interact with members of the crowd one on one - if there are lights, I may not even be able to see them! Which is one reason I can function well as a professor! I'm currently struggling with the increase in administrative roles as you move up in that profession, though, and (given that I got diagnosed due to a bad case of burnout last semester) I can't say I've fully worked out strategies for dealing with that!
      I probably wouldn't film anything at a bus stop, though, because I would be annoyed if someone else was yammering at their phone camera and possibly including my annoyed face in their shot - so, it wouldn't so much be being noticed that stopped me as not wanting to be that guy!

    • @Bababoey3333
      @Bababoey3333 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      😊😊

  • @AnRel
    @AnRel ปีที่แล้ว +221

    This video hit really really hard. Thank you Mica, for your art and your insight.

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +22

      thank you so much, you're a big inspiration!

  • @solidsnake1806
    @solidsnake1806 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Every single meaningful friendship I've ever had in my life has fallen apart due to my executive dysfunction and extremely low social battery that would not allow me to engage in friendships at the crazy level that allistic people require. Coming to terms with the fact that I might never have friends is difficult, and sometimes I still try to delude myself into thinking I can change that without sending myself into weeks long, life ruining autistic burnout, but videos like this one help a lot and mean the world to me. Thank you for this.

    • @notNajimi
      @notNajimi 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Having other autistic friends is a game changer in my experience

    • @voidify3
      @voidify3 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ⁠@@notNajimi yeah! “Nobody understands” is just false- sure, allistic people don’t understand but you aren’t the only autistic person in the world. I don’t know OP’s circumstances or where they might go to find autistic friends but for everyone who feels the same way as OP: there are people in the world who want to hear you talk in an autistic way about the things that bring you joy, and who won’t be offended by you sometimes disappearing once they know it’s for autistic reasons. I know from experience.

  • @robokill387
    @robokill387 ปีที่แล้ว +855

    FYI "introvert" is a personality trait and isn't to be confused with being asocial, which is when you don't like social situations and people, and being antisocial, which is where you actively engage in behaviours that violate other's rights and don't feel guilt.people mix them up all the time, and it drives me nuts.

    • @SynthApprentice
      @SynthApprentice ปีที่แล้ว +133

      And it's possible to be both introverted and social at the same time!

    • @veronicafoxx8590
      @veronicafoxx8590 ปีที่แล้ว +85

      Oh, thank you for clearing that up! I've been calling myself antisocial for years, and I'm actually asocial. Small groups of people I know are okay so long as they are short (unless they are a TTRPG, which I have and can do ALL DAY), but big groups and strangers are absolute torture.

    • @kaworunagisa4009
      @kaworunagisa4009 ปีที่แล้ว +42

      Same. I'm both extremely introverted (learned trauma-based, I used to be an extroverted child) and asocial (and have social anxiety, and am autistic), and the difference is clear.

    • @transsexual_computer_faery
      @transsexual_computer_faery ปีที่แล้ว +48

      i do not believe Mica ever used it to mean anything but introverted?
      i could be wrong!

    • @gljames24
      @gljames24 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      There's also Aplatonic which people don't know about but is totally valid.

  • @DrAnarchy69
    @DrAnarchy69 ปีที่แล้ว +305

    As hard as it is for me to socialize, especially with allistic people, I crave social interaction because it gives me so much happiness. Also I'm a union girl and you can't unionize by yourself. But shit is hard, especially when allistic people never mean what they say and never say what they mean. That's the trouble with living in an anti autistic world while also wanting to socialize and organize. However, overall I've found that the outdoors also contains other autistic folks and radical communities that want the same goals as me. This video really spoke to the struggles of needing to socialize in an allistic world.

    • @PirateQueen1720
      @PirateQueen1720 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      The "allistic people never mean what they say and never say what they mean" bit hit me. I have trouble with being seen as pedantic when being precise about words (though I think that one gets attributed to me being a professor who can't turn the grading-brain off, when in fact I've been like that since childhood), or trying to pull some kind of power play when I ask someone to explain. ("Pssh - you know what I mean!" No, I don't. I wouldn't have asked if I did!)
      But yeah, as you said...finding people (autistic or not) who are genuinely willing to work WITH you on communication (and what you can do with that connection) is worth it.

    • @Anarchivist343
      @Anarchivist343 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You have to find an organizing role that takes advantage of your strengths. Personally, I like managing spreadsheets, writing newsletter articles and op-eds, and taking notes during meetings. I can't help you make friends but there is a place for all of us in the movement.

    • @commonsense3921
      @commonsense3921 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Socializing with the “right” people make’s me happy but after realizing it’s just not many of those people I come to accept that, I find enjoyment in my solitude.

  • @johannabelle
    @johannabelle ปีที่แล้ว +45

    Thank you for another wonderful, thoughtful video, Mica. "The only thing that happens when you step outside your comfort zone is that your comfort zone becomes smaller and harder to leave" - this made me cry because I felt it so deeply. My past experiences with social rejection have led to me developing really severe RSD, which can make my social behavior even more strange and offputting to other people. There are times I just feel like a living web of emotional scar tissue.
    You are doing incredible work by being so vulnerable and articulating these raw, tender feelings so clearly. Wishing you a happy spring and summer before fall and winter blessedly return!

  • @rudetuesday
    @rudetuesday ปีที่แล้ว +42

    I relate very closely to the idea of not wanting to be perceived. Being racialized can cause an almost continual feedback loop of watching myself and my behavior very carefully, while being alert to others who may or many not be looking at me. There's the busy categorization and prioritizing of energy allocated to thoughts, feelings and behaviors, and so much more.
    I've been working at picking apart misanthropy, at least to enough of a degree to keep my discomfort--my dis-ease--local to myself. I don't find myself lonely very often, which I am grateful for.
    It's good to see you. Glad you're here.

  • @_shadow_1
    @_shadow_1 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    As someone who unknowingly had ADHD for the longest time, I relate to the feeling of ashame out in public. I felt so bad about myself for being so bad at life for the longest time for having nothing to show for it dispite trying harder than I assume most people out there do.
    I didn't understand what I was doing wrong, why I needed to look at the instructions for a task a lot more than other people, why I always forget easy stuff why more than my peers, why I wasn't motivated to do anything unless there was a strong sense of urgency, why couldn't do almost anything efficiently without a body double, and why I almost chronically got distracted by anything more interesting than what I was doing even from my own thoughts.

  • @mar-mar316
    @mar-mar316 ปีที่แล้ว +62

    I can relate so much to the fear of being genuine and vulnerable, of being perceived and judged unkindly. Your videos and your journey are inspiring, and I thank you for sharing.

  • @Valenspire
    @Valenspire ปีที่แล้ว +42

    This felt relatable, the fear of taking up space is very much real for me. There are things I want to do but hold back on because of not wanting to be loud and obnoxious, or just inconvenience someone, I can't think of any reason why this is. This problem has only grown in years because of being stuck living with my parents, feeling trapped. I hopefully will get the help I need soon so I can move out and build a life for myself of my own choice.

  • @Estradiol_Gaming
    @Estradiol_Gaming ปีที่แล้ว +177

    I've got ADHD and I relate to this so much. Between that and being trans not wanting to be perceived describes large parts of my life

    • @jjjjjjjjkigghh8662
      @jjjjjjjjkigghh8662 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      I have ADHD too and relate to a LOT of this as well.

    • @madgadgetss
      @madgadgetss ปีที่แล้ว +5

      SAME SAME SAME

  • @skelenigma
    @skelenigma 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

    I have never heard someone able to describe the horrible hate and fear that I feel towards all other people when trying to do things right and stay away from said people. Thank you so much. I can’t even tell where mine came from, I don’t know if I had childhood trauma because I don’t remember most of it… I wish I knew more.
    Thank you, Ember 💙

  • @fdfrancisdaniele
    @fdfrancisdaniele ปีที่แล้ว +19

    Your videos are too relatable for me. Every one of your autism-themed essays I watched made me more convinced that I'm autistic. I'm 39, and all my life I've been thinking that I was just introverted, struggling with the perceived "irrationality" of my fears.

  • @NeiZaMo
    @NeiZaMo ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Helping old people while grocery shopping: brain happy!
    Being recognized and greeted by old people i don't recognize: brain anxious!

  • @ZatClaire
    @ZatClaire ปีที่แล้ว +308

    I'm a self-diagnosed autistic trans woman, and the phrase "do not perceive me" is something I think to myself a lot when I'm out shopping. Especially if I'm by myself.
    I really want to have more people that are consistently in my life, but it's so difficult. This is definitely on me, as I never initiate contact, but it still sucks.

    • @flaming6
      @flaming6 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      I've found that initiating contact in spaces designed for other autistics is way easier. The Double Empathy Problem cuts both ways - we can build community faster and better with those in compatible neurotypes. If we're the ones in greater supply in that space, if we're the moderators and thought leaders there, then it's not on *us* to be the ones to fit in by cutting off pieces of ourselves. I'm in a few discords where trans people or autistics outnumber everyone else, and it is an *amazing* relief.

    • @astranott
      @astranott ปีที่แล้ว +5

      as another autistic trans woman, i feel the same way. you're not alone, sis. I hope things get better for you❤

    • @Amethyst-Bat
      @Amethyst-Bat ปีที่แล้ว

      As a fellow trans fem and possibly autisic person (I am still trying to figure that one out), I fully agree.

    • @projectpitchfork860
      @projectpitchfork860 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      How do you want to know that your autistic if you weren't diagnosed? Because autism can only be duagnised by a professionel.

    • @flaming6
      @flaming6 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      @@projectpitchfork860 I added it up one time, the cost of what getting the autism diagnosis for me would have been, and it’s over $1k. Also, there’s no benefit to getting the diagnosis, since I live in a place that has no adult services for autistic folk. Also also, there are now laws in place in other states in the US that if you have an autism diagnosis, you cannot access transition care for any reason, and my state will absolutely jump on that bandwagon.
      So yeah, to hell with getting a diagnosis, I’m listening to my autistic friends who are like, your brain works like ours does, here why don’t you take this RDOS quiz.

  • @iammotanz
    @iammotanz ปีที่แล้ว +64

    I just googled "I hate people" and "I don't wanna be perceived" like 20 hrs ago and then I see this video recently uploaded. THANK YOU 🙌
    I'm a 33 guy in the middle of my ASD diagnosis process, unemployed for 6 months. I've always tried to avoid people, 'cause I'm in physical pain whenever I have to interact, except when I'm giving classes. I'm a language teacher and I love it, but definitely not a fan of PR, marketing, finances, and everything else needed to get more and better students. I just can't sell myself, it feels so disingenuous to me, even when I've received great feedback from past students, the impostor syndrome keeps winning.
    Some people have suggested I become a content creator so it's easier to showcase my skills and services, but it's so difficult, it's like having another job completely 😭 I don't really use social media, I hate being perceived even in digital form. I am so afraid of judgement, 'cause I know I judge others 😞 (even writing this comment is giving me full anxiety, pffft)
    I'll try practicing in public like you did and maybe I'll be uploading a video here soon or have a bunch of TikToks ready to upload for the next 6 months, who knows. Once again, THANK YOU 🙏

    • @franki1990
      @franki1990 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Wish you the best.

    • @populadopula
      @populadopula ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You can do it!!

    • @saisyuumaho
      @saisyuumaho ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Languages are super cool, I believe in you!

  • @werbnaright5012
    @werbnaright5012 ปีที่แล้ว +18

    This one hit close to home.
    I'm a nurse and I like to think I'm pretty decent at it. The only thing is, I can't function properly if my patients are conscious and of sound mind, or infront of coworkers. Currently I'm working overnights, alone, with patients who can't communicate and I'm thriving. It's taken a long time to even figure out that this is what works for me. And I'm okay with it for now. I don't want to be this way forever though.

  • @jelloled
    @jelloled ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Wow, so relatable. I was also humiliated in primary school (because I dared to paint a duck in another colour other than yellow?!?) and I also had my last customer service job at 32. I haven't been able to work since. And I'm also currently doing that sort of "end-all" project giving the world one last chance before I retire to live without ever achieving anything.

  • @anettera3460
    @anettera3460 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    not being able to cope with service work is killer in the US. i mean that literally too.
    thank you always for your inspiring words and your thoughtfulness.

  • @just_a_dustpan
    @just_a_dustpan ปีที่แล้ว +59

    Mica you’re being way too relatable for me. I’m seeing myself in this video and I’m not sure I like it.
    Keep up the good work, Mica, ilysm

  • @mirithilrose54
    @mirithilrose54 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    Mica, it's a huge step that you're not walking in a circle anymore. I hope you're proud of that because I sure am. And I found it very hopeful to see. 💖

  • @adamtongue847
    @adamtongue847 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    This is the most relatable video I’ve watched in years. All of it.
    Running out of energy to pass/mask after years of putting myself into a job that requires socialising (supporting those with autism living within the community ironically) because it felt like the only way to get myself out there in any solid capacity.
    Struggling with the wolves you mentioned and still doing so like an never ending trench war and constantly rationalising in order to keep myself from hating other people or myself the way I used to when I was younger.
    Stretched and squeezed by changing seasons as much as my inconsistency when dealing with others. It’s exhausting but important to remember we’re not alone, else the lack of external perspective and exposure to the wider world makes my difficulties getting myself out there even harder than they need to be.
    It’s a tightrope balancing between rest and recover to prevent burn out and pushing against myself against my comfort zone to prevent it getting any smaller and falling into isolation. It’s hard but it’s not any easier if we give up trying to maintain what few connection to others we’re able to make… in fact I’d say that’s worse.
    Life is definitely more work for some than others but that doesn’t mean life isn’t worth living, even if we have to deal with others failing to see the extra efforts we make in order to keep up.
    Thanks for the video.

  • @cathybrand2885
    @cathybrand2885 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I’m actually in ore of you. I related to loads in this film. Im now 50 and going through my autism assessment. I now realise it’s the fear of how people perceive me rather than the fear of people. I absolutely love your channel. 😍

  • @Roughling
    @Roughling ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I don't think I've seen this "I don't wanna be perceived rn" sentiment anywhere else but it resonates so much, I actually said that to partners before. Don't really know how to articulate how eye-opening it was to hear that said by someone else and I *will* mention this to my therapist now lol

  • @imfine_ithink
    @imfine_ithink ปีที่แล้ว +17

    thank you for helping me exposing my own pain. i stopped making videos when i was spotted one time making one. this is hard. i feel you.

  • @remygallardo7364
    @remygallardo7364 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    AU/ADHD here, and honestly this makes a lot of sense and I feel everything you're saying genuinely. It took about 3 years after my diagnosis at 26 to really begin to identify my limitations and needs, what exhausts me and what I need to be comfortable and it was really sobering. I don't necessarily want to be alone/unperceived. More so I recognize I have trauma from the life before my diagnosis where I didn't know I was different, why people treated me poorly, and how aggressively antagonistically designed the social space is in favor of neurotypical perception. So while I would argue I am naturally extroverted the energy I get from people is functionally a slow poison if I have to mask to get it. So I spend a lot of time alone, recovering, working up the energy to mask so I can get just a little more.
    It wasn't until the last year I began instead intentionally unmasking at times around people I trust and introducing them to the idea that they are unconsciously making the space hostile for people like me and making that opening for them to make an effort and show they care, or continue on and I'll know where I stand with them. And over time I am beginning to feel more energy. I can tell especially when it comes to my art. Two years ago I barely could find the energy, mentally and physically, to even doodle. But I'm able to spend an hour every other week or two to do a digital painting or some figure studies now. And my skills are growing just as fast now which gives me all the more confidence in moving forward.
    I'm lucky in a way that I am able to "function" reasonably well so long as my routine is uninterrupted, but it is way more fragile than I realized and introducing new people to my life destabilizes it. It is a very tight balance to walk, needing the energy from others, needing the routine to not collapse in a spiral towards breakdown, and wanting so very much to make the space more comfortable for all people.

  • @disdrac
    @disdrac ปีที่แล้ว +18

    Very relatable ❤ sure sucks not being able to do stuff because someone might see you doing it.

  • @lynnxe
    @lynnxe ปีที่แล้ว +5

    I have never in my life seen someone discuss exactly how I’ve always felt, and I also have never been able to find the words for it. I felt like you were inside my brain, and yet I’ve struggled to explain this to others for so long! Thank you for this gift - I’ve just found your channel and I can’t wait to see more.

  • @CaptainHat
    @CaptainHat ปีที่แล้ว +26

    Hey, just wanted to say I discovered your videos just as I was going through my own autistic burnout (and diagnosis, at age 40) process and I wanted to say thank you. I absolutely love what you do and how you present your points and I think what you're doing is not just great, it's important.
    You may only be presenting a curated version of yourself in your videos, but the self you present, at least, is a wonderful person and I think the world is a better place because it has you in it :).

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +4

      😭🙏 thank you!!

  • @annehmbar
    @annehmbar ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I put this on my watch later playlist in fear of this video being too emotional or too accurate for me to handle and never intend for those videos to actually being watched by me later. But i'm glad i watched it right away.
    It's scary to take up space in a world where i feel that i'm in the way of other people all the time. Feeling like an inconvenience, a burden, or just a weird person back in middleschool. I think without my creative outlet i would be way more insecure. My art is a part of me that i can trust in and take pride in, talk about, show others. But sometimes i'm still ashamed that i'm pushing it in peoples faces, because i have nothing else thats interesting about me (except se exellent puns!!! But not many people like them).
    I hope to one day work with other creatives. I feel like the creative workfields are like a hiding place for former weird kids and we can find each other there and support one another for the first time in our lives.
    Thank you for your openness and bravery in this video.
    LETS TAKE UP SPACE!!🎉

  • @zidanidane
    @zidanidane ปีที่แล้ว +3

    i relate. ive wanted strongly to film myself outside for videos in the past and ive tried many many times and if i ever got to positioning my camera and hitting record id have already lost most of my brain, and if i had anything to say then the people walking by would be the nail in the coffin. i also feel really really weird seeing other people filming themself in public and doing arts like wall calligraphy and drawings, i'd just not understand how they could just be doing that (and my thought process would be very very complexly flawed, cause obviously they built up courage and they have a different brain than me, but it still baffled me how it was possible at all). also literally doing anything outside that isnt walking and maybe some discreet stimming is so hard for me. always always have a hard time being perceived, doing anything, to any amount of passengers outside

  • @emmanuelwolfmusic410
    @emmanuelwolfmusic410 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    when your born a land animal, but you long for the sea. no matter how much you asociate with the land animals, you will always be a fish, sometimes being misanthropic is a blessing, as we see things that others cant even comprehend in one lifetime. people dont deserve repect unless earned, as the masses headed straight for toilet paper, i will never forget that. im glad im me, and im glad people stare like im a freak, becuase, to them, im an alien from another world, and they are just cows eating grass in a field, so let them chew on it .

  • @emmelinesprig489
    @emmelinesprig489 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    So comforting to hear these thoughts. Thank you.
    I don’t have any formal diagnoses yet, but there is certainly something neurodivergent about how my brain works. Social anxiety has truly disabled me. Even though I crave community and friendship, mutual understanding and care, I haven’t been able to bring myself to reach out. This video gave me a new perspective. The internet has brought so much positive opportunity for those of us who struggle being perceived in traditional social environments. I crave perception, but my past experiences have convinced my nervous system that perception is inherently and ultimately dangerous in my social circles. Your video helped me realize, I need new circles. Your call to action rattled something deep within me. I can create circles! Wow! Thank you again 🙂

  • @Aury
    @Aury ปีที่แล้ว +4

    For years my favourite time to be outside is in rainstorms, was one of the best things about my time in the highlands, because the consistency of sound is calming and pairs well with nobody wanting to stop and chat.

  • @SumBrennus
    @SumBrennus ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Liking this video is going to make the Algorithm think I like you. I don't know you at all. And my misanthropy and autism also shuts me away much of the time. What finally broke me was losing my last job, the software I was writing and the charity I had set up to make an observatory as the exit plan from that job. Losing my home and independence was the icing on the cake.

  • @bakedbaker9882
    @bakedbaker9882 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Only part way through the video rn. I'm a mix between doomer and introvert. I've just had so many shitty things happen to me by people I once trusted. Strangers and especially family... I just can't trust people like I used to, and I'm jealous of those who can and seemingly never get hurt for it. It's just not fair. Now I socially isolate myself, although I don't really want to all the time. I'm just so tired.

  • @ebetg4191
    @ebetg4191 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    this whole video really hits home for me, but i especially want to thank you for showing yourself still wearing a mask!

  • @astranott
    @astranott ปีที่แล้ว +5

    in my journey of realizing myself, this video is full of things that I relate to. I've wanted to be a youtuber since smosh got popular and have never been confident enough to go through with it. I tried being a musician too, with that being the last thing i truly wanted, and when the pandemic came and ruined that temporarily, i just became a hermit instead, not pursuing any passions because that means people will look at it.
    I always felt like I'm too late to something, like it's too late to be a youtuber or a musician or too late to pursue anything interesting to me. when I was a kid I saw bitcoin get bigger and bigger and it put an evil truth in my head that I'll never be able to start anything, and while I would say that 'it's never true' to a friend, I would believe that myself. it's like I'm a grifter for my own self advocacy.
    I've been learning quite a bit about autism and trauma and being queer and trans and all the joys life offers if you just put yourself there, but I'm still not confident enough to try more than a bare minimum level of existence.
    back to the video, i think loneliness is a unique type of marginalization, because inherently, you are away from people, where is much harder to build a community. there's gonna need to be a lot of unique and creative solutions to solve it
    this was a pretty great video, it got me thinking a lot, and a little more inspired to be myself, if only inspiration itself could make change.

  • @jeng3609
    @jeng3609 6 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    I love your voice and accent. I relate so much to this video. I feel like you wrote this in my head. I am newly diagnosed low-level autistic at 46 yrs old. It has been a confusing and frustrating life. Things are starting to make sense though. I am looking for people like you to learn from and to better understanding myself. Thank you-

  • @digitalHistorian
    @digitalHistorian ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Thank you for this. I related so hard. I am at constant war with myself with trying to be both understood and heard but yet taking up as little space as possible.

  • @ResplendentTrash
    @ResplendentTrash ปีที่แล้ว +11

    This is incredibly relatable! I've been trying for what seems like years to put myself out there and say something about what is important to me. Thank you for this!

  • @michaelseitz8938
    @michaelseitz8938 ปีที่แล้ว +16

    So much in this video feels very familiar.
    I found it helpful to really live out my misanthropy, both with my facial expression and by actually jelling at people that annoy me. And it creates a nice and comfy vicious circle: When I still feel uneasy around people and think they are staring at me, I get more enraged automatically. To the point where I really don't care about my surroundings any more. Another positive aspect of the vicious misanthropy circle is that most people appreciate anger and rage and everyone just loves you instantly. Yes, some sarcasm ... although ... this is how I survived school ... 🙁

    • @marocat4749
      @marocat4749 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think niot caring and letting that out can really help and is healthy, I guessdegree and situational, but if people like you honest, they like you.
      Honestly i think eveyone needs to live out their negative somewhat not destractive.
      And not caring can help, in school i guess not being bullied or so?! Not no caring, not caring what others think too much.

  • @lucasprobably
    @lucasprobably ปีที่แล้ว +18

    im really excited for this video because while i'm autistic, i've never struggled much with anxiety so i want to understand more about it, to better understand some of the people i know. this looks like it will be enlightening!

  • @kelpler427
    @kelpler427 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you so much for making this video. So many of the experiences and feelings you've talked about hit really close to home, and I completely understand the inability and crippling fear that makes me unable to truly be myself in public. Even just mentioning that you froze up when in the sight of others makes me realize that I'm not alone in this, and that maybe things can work out if I keep trying. While I still have a long way to go, this video has helped provide a little bit of hope for me, especially in realizing that building up all of these internalized negative feelings and masking aren't exactly sustainable solutions. Again, thank you for having the courage to make this, and I sincerely hope that you can continue to find happiness and stability in this world that seems to screw us over at every turn.

  • @martatiruriquanplou3808
    @martatiruriquanplou3808 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I cried so much with this video, not because of sadness, because of how relatable everything you said is for me. Thank you for your work Mica.

  • @shinywarm6906
    @shinywarm6906 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    The way you integrate the large scale social and political with the personal and intimate is brilliant. I'm currently doing medical research on the psychological and psychiatric impact of SLE/lupus. It's such a complex topic, and I'm convinced we'll only really make progress when we acknowledget the way that bodies and minds and the social environment are an integrated whole (and that capitalist patriarchy makes us sick!). Your vids are genuinely a model for explaining how that works

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wow thank you so much, you're going to love the video I'm writing now about alienation!

    • @shinywarm6906
      @shinywarm6906 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@Ember_Green Brilliant! I definitely will! I just wrote something on anxiety as the basic affect of neoliberaism; alienation is such an important concept too

  • @songsofloveresistance8549
    @songsofloveresistance8549 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I waited a couple of weeks to watch this, both as a raging introvert, and as someone who struggles being in front of a camera (although for differing reasons I won't go into). I'm a non-speaking autistic person who had to be carer to both parents and siblings, and had to learn to advocate for them. I begun using YT for disability advocacy when other disabilities stopped/limited my use of other social media platforms, as an extension of the disability advocacy I do irl. I'm not sure people appreciate how exhausting even the simplest video can be. *Thank you* for this video. I felt this one in my bones, creaky as they are. I will say this about those who can take selfies and film tiktoks outside without feeling self conscious about it: they have autonomy over their image, and I'm glad of that.

  • @HeavyMetalSociologist
    @HeavyMetalSociologist ปีที่แล้ว +51

    Loved this video. I so appreciate your openness and vulnerability, especially at the end - this truly did humanize the process/struggle of creating, and still managed to inspire hope. Also many congrats to Boba on catching the fly :)

  • @linushumphrys2463
    @linushumphrys2463 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    I'm only 9 minutes in but already in tears from how much I see myself in this video, thank you for making another banger 🖤🖤🖤

  • @mcsalturn5979
    @mcsalturn5979 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    I was a bit late for the premiere, but I managed to watch all of it now... and I feel I really needed this. This felt both extremely validating and relatable, I really appreciate the effort you went through to make all of this a reality, as I see that it was very challenging ❤
    As someone that constanly struggles with anxiety and self-doubt and it's still working on fixing my own issues (I started going to therapy 2 weeks ago!), I found myself nodding and just audibly saying to myself "YES, IT'S EXACTLY LIKE THAT" when you talked about being percieved and all the insecurities that come with it.
    I wish I could go more on details on some things u said that really hit the mark and will definitely stay in my mind for a LONG time but... well it's all very well said and done in the video so I really don't have much to add.
    All I'm gonna state is thank you, I really wish rn I could have financial independance so that I could join your Patreon, but maybe soon. 💞

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Thank you so much for the comment, knowing that I'm reaching people is worth the most to me. That's why I'm here ❤

  • @autumn.chills
    @autumn.chills ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I’m AuDHD & really identify with a lot of this. Being perceived can be quite painful and make doing routine things like shopping or going on a walk in public incredibly draining. Also totally off topic but that sage green colour (silk robe) looks STUNNING on you.

  • @penniesfromhell
    @penniesfromhell ปีที่แล้ว +3

    "I do not wish to be percieved" resonates SO fucking strong with me. Thats exactly how i feel.

  • @GabeNode21
    @GabeNode21 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This video spoke to me on so many levels; it's hard to put into words. I don't think I'm autistic but I do have diagnoses of ADHD and Dyspraxia and theres a lot of crossover there. I relate to so much here, the tendency towards misanthropy I see in myself, which I also dislike about myself, recognising a deep need for community, struggling to keep jobs, especially ones with strong customer focus, social anxiety, and feeling those same feelings of dispair and hopelessness but doing what I can to push past them. I've even considered trying content creation myself, but I've yet to get the confidence to give it a proper go. Thank you for this.

  • @geisterwesen
    @geisterwesen ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This video was really painfully relatable!! Thank you so much for putting yourself out there like this, it means a lot. Especially the part about jobs, being unable to work the regular 9-5 is really isolating, and it's so nice to see you arrive in a spot that makes you happy (at least as far as I can see)! I hope I'll be this brave one day :) But for now, writing a comment is my filming myself outside moment

  • @TalysAlankil
    @TalysAlankil ปีที่แล้ว +3

    oh no the "i was unable to record something if i knew my partner was home" i hate how much i relate to this

  • @DrHixPhD
    @DrHixPhD ปีที่แล้ว +2

    On the point about perception, during the pandemic, I found I loved wearing a mask in public, especially along with a hat. It made me realise how powerful niqab can be. Having that control over what of yourself you let other people see is great (although I am conscious that my experience of public perception will be very different to most niqabis and other Muslim women in the "West"). Having a physical mask meant I was less obligated to socially mask for the gaze of strangers

  • @mrpieceofwork
    @mrpieceofwork ปีที่แล้ว +3

    OMG the "I hate people" memes! I am dying! (I still have a few of my favorites, tucked away somewhere only I can visit and giggle a little when I need to feel that "hate" ok this is getting very weird... bye)

  • @EyesOnBreen
    @EyesOnBreen ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I appreciate you sharing so much behind the scenes of how filming around others - even your partner - scares you and how stifling it can be. Needing near total isolation to feel halfway comfortable as yourself, or at least getting good at hiding to do so. Not only is it something I feel myself, but that honesty is something so much content on autism/ADHD lacks. When creators edit and script themselves to appearing neurotypical, it creates a disconnect between the video discussing masking, social aversion, and other neurodivergent traits and the reality of them. This isn't a bad thing, it just makes seeing the traits for what they truly are more difficult...which is probably why I didn't know I was neurodivergent until I was 30.
    Thank you. You make great videos. (also thank you for teaching me the word "gormless")

  • @Portablesounds
    @Portablesounds ปีที่แล้ว +2

    As an autistic adult, this spoke to me deeply. I feel like TH-cam can lead to me setting enormously high social expectations for myself, since even a lot of autistic creators appear so put together after editing (and a general aversion to showing negative personal attributes). Its not their fault, but when so much of my social interaction ends up being parasocial on here, it can easily warp your expectations. Being social is hard, especially when 90%+ of the population can't empathize.

  • @FearlessSon
    @FearlessSon ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I've shared that misanthropic impulse, seeing a world that doesn't just hurt me, but callously hurts so many others and doesn't seem to care. But my outlook has never been to hide from it, because I know I can't If I can't flee, then all I can do is fight. Which is why in my most misanthropic moments, I want to expire from the world while charging straight toward the worst parts of it and screaming my defiance.

  • @ecpetty
    @ecpetty ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Wow, I relate to so much of this. As another world traveler (Rotary exchange student to Germany for a year in high school, had no idea I was autistic back then) it was lovely seeing you out and about in Berlin. As someone who also has plenty of legitimate reasons to hate and give up on people (including similar work experiences like you shared), for reasons I still can’t explain … I just can’t. Maybe it’s partly because I know people like you, and so many other beautiful and talented artists and creators here and everywhere, exist. ❤

  • @supercrownjosie7732
    @supercrownjosie7732 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    the way you described your work history hit me deeply. i'm currently between jobs, again, and i just. i don't know what i'm going to do.

  • @lostsanityreturned
    @lostsanityreturned ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I do and do not relate to elements of this. More specifically a part of me relates to it more strongly from when I was younger.
    Misanthropy or affected misanthropy was how I survived intense depression and hurt after (and I guess at the end of) my childhood and teenage years, so from the age of 16 to 20 I found solace in feeling hatred/distrust/disdain towards everyone in my life as well as the existence of anyone I saw/thought of regardless of if I had interactions with them or not. I participated in stress relief activities that validated my view point on people and used my hyper awareness of my surroundings to point out how much awful behaviour is around us at near any moment if I was ever challenged.
    Then I went into a deep depression and transitional phase, during college (17-20) I felt the burden of the above, the lack of support and the shrinkage of goals/motivation. I started becoming motivated into doing things exceptionally so I didn't have to leave my room outside of exercise, this included my studies and my choice of work (web development and lite software engineering). I found that what I had used to stabilize myself no longer worked and I had started to hate my own attitude as much as I hated the people around me, and that forced a change.
    I began to force myself to be more social, develop friendships again and started working more labor intensive jobs that required me to be around others again even though I could have at that point continued to work from home or a cubical.
    Ultimately, multiple years later and after much reflection I can say I like people as a whole, as something to think about and appreciate if not so much for an acceptance of common human behaviours I witness.
    I generally choose not to interact with people outside of what I deign has purpose but that is no longer born from anxiety, stress, rejection or misanthropy. I have come to understand this is what I always wanted even as a very young child and I was never allowed to be. I have friends, I can make friends easily, people want to be around me; and yet it is not a strong motivator for anything in my life; I am as a person for a multitude of reasons just not driven to connect/engage to the same degree as many others I meet and that is okay. (it is there to some degree obviously, I am writing this in the first place, but aspirationally less so).
    As for the seasonal stuff, I love rain winter and cold. I adore night time and a lack of light / less ambient sound. I cannot relate at all. I would say that I run hot and that was what everyone who I had dated had said in the past, but my fiance runs hotter and they feel the cold far more intensely than I do.
    I really do wish I had learnt about Autism earlier in my life though, my father knew and chose not to tell me. I only looked into it because my partner was caring for a non-verbal child at the time I went into research mode; since then my father has been diagnosed formally and the clear progression can be seen on his father's side of the family. There is a lot I could have done with knowing earlier though, I can't do anything about it now, but I wish I could.

  • @SuzetteMorganStudio
    @SuzetteMorganStudio ปีที่แล้ว +1

    In 2005 I started my first business, and it was the best decision I ever made.
    Chronic illness has prevented me from working for the past two years but now I'm starting a new business, using my experience to help people start their own self-employment journey. For neurodivergents and people with chronic illness self-employment can be a viable option.

  • @aboutrainbow8614
    @aboutrainbow8614 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This really helped me. I'm currently suffering from isolation; I have no choice in a lot of cases, and it feels like I'm dying sometimes. It's comforting knowing there might be community out there for me if I keep looking, and its even more comforting to know that its not a bad, self centered thing to want people to remember me.

  • @ruplayinggame3080
    @ruplayinggame3080 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Filming at Alexanderplatz seems soooo stressful. I have a difficult time just *being* at Alexanderplatz, because too many people. I think a bunch of times I've gone into misanthropy, just disappointed in all the lack of care, introspection and everything that 'normal' (typical? normative?) people exhibit a lot of the time (I'm on the adhd side of things). I have come down on the side of empathy and I stay there most of the time. I'm trying to find my circle of people as well and maybe things are starting to come together (though I have trouble trusting in that). I really admire the art that you're doing

  • @AlterNature38
    @AlterNature38 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Rarely have I ever been jealous of those who are "taking up space and are careless of all around them". I judge them because all too often, I see people like that taking up far TOO MUCH space, such that it encroaches upon others & results in being a clear infringement on the right to peace and fairness of the public around them. It is EXACTLY that level of carelessness that I so despise about people who act in this way. People who are so utterly self-absorbed to the point of lacking the capacity for, and being ignorant of the most basic of considerations to other citizens in their immediate vicinity. The "Me first and me only!" mentality I see on display by people like this every single day, is almost impossible not to pass negative judgement upon. I am not jealous of these people, because I would never want to be anything like them.
    Autistic self-advocacy is (unfortunately) to me something I can only see as yet another expectation, yet another piece of undue and unwanted pressure put upon the shoulders of autistic people - yet another thing telling them that if they want any kind of chance at lasting fulfillment in their lives, then THEY need to DO MORE and THEY need to WORK HARDER.
    The vast majority of us have endured enough. Well beyond enough.
    We don't need to work harder or do more. What we need is a miracle.
    Society can go and do one.

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว

      Bet you're fun at parties.

  • @FaiaHalo
    @FaiaHalo ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Mica, thank you SO MUCH for this video!! I'm autistic and a leftist anarchist, and up until this point, I've never had the language to express that EXACT feeling of having so many wishes to create community and leading change, but also being isolated most of the time because being outside and around people usually overwhelms me. Thank you so much for constantly helping me betger communicate myself. Much love from Latin America ❤

  • @renyoudie
    @renyoudie ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Holy shit, I've never been diagnosed, but I've never felt so understood. This feeling of dread that even makes things as simple as trying to interact with roommates and their friends a monumental task, to the point I just dont even open my door so they dont have to see me at all and be burdened by knowing that I unfortunately exist. I just wish I was invisible and didn't have to try to justify my existence to people that (at least in my head) endlessly question the fact that I do exist.
    I know that they dont think about me anywhere near as much as I do but I cant shake the lie that my mind tells me. That they all think the worst of me, and that I'm some kind of creep or weirdo when I want nothing more than to feel like a normal person and just be able to talk. I would love to be a normal person and just talk endlessly like everyone else. I would love to live that existence but instead i get... this. I hate it. So much.

  • @SashaRomeroMusic
    @SashaRomeroMusic ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’m sitting in a hotel in Paris, my favorite city on the planet, because I’m trans and don’t want to be perceived today. It’s so much mental and physical effort to get ready for going outside. I enjoy it, but it’s exhausting. I’m on tour and no one is inviting me to anything, and it’s hard seeing all my coworkers post lovely videos of them having fun with their friends without feeling misanthropic. So this video meant a lot to me, and I do like you, enough to finally become a patreon subscriber! It really spoke to my very recent internal monologue in ways I didn’t know I needed, so thank you, and I hope you get the confidence and self love needed to make that TikTok video. If it helps, I always try to remember a time when some stranger did something embarrassing, and then ask myself if I can remember their face? Or what happened specifically? Odds are I can’t, and likewise, you’re just a fleeting and vague memory to most strangers at bus stops.

    • @Ember_Green
      @Ember_Green  ปีที่แล้ว

      thank you so much! although I do hope the rest of the tour is more enjoyable for you!

  • @dandelion_16
    @dandelion_16 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you for making this. As someone who has suffered both verbal and physical abuse for their behavior, I relate a lot to the fear of anyone judging or perceivibg me because I assumed it to be negative automatically, cause what else could it be? This, combined with learning about everything humans fricked up (from climate to colonization to mass extinction and destruction of nature) made me really mysantrophic. I still only believe in individuals, not humanity as a species, but I have succeeded at making friends who who don't seem to mind me. Majorly it's queer neurodivergents I can get truly real with though.
    I think what scared me in the idea of a community was the expectation of having to face those people who might tolerate, but not get me and that brought back all the childhood trauma. I don't trust people to like me enough to catch me when I fall because most of the time I was simply invisible to them, tolerated and forgotten. I still don't know what to do w the concept of a community-based future. Whether I'll just turn full hermit and dissapear, or whether I'll become some 1% encounter enigma, but I've met people I like, that like and get me and who actually reach out to me without needing to be asked to do so. So we'll see.

  • @stephanev4851
    @stephanev4851 ปีที่แล้ว +22

    I have always been told that I am "just shy" and an introvert and (not so loudly, but still) that I shouldn't pretend I am something special whenever I tried to express those feelings. Today I think that it is very possible that I am "just autistic"... (not sure if it would be useful for me to be diagnosed). I really admire that you were able to speak out loud when in public, I can't even do that when home alone! And the manner you speak is just beautiful.

  • @danrudge5997
    @danrudge5997 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Mad respect. Autistic adhd singer songwriter comedian. Diagnosed at 14. 22 years ago. Subscribed.

  • @justrachel4496
    @justrachel4496 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Something I discovered recently is that most friends are happy to workshop plans with you! Suggestions are just that - suggestions, and when an allistic person proposes a particular meetup, they usually haven't agonized over it like most autistic people would have and are therefore not particularly attached to it most of the time. What all this means is, you can usually compromise and come up with plans that are more comfortable and/or a little overwhelming, rather than completely unmanageable. It's life-changing when it comes to the anxiety of being around others.

  • @quixoticcoyoticcannibalystic
    @quixoticcoyoticcannibalystic ปีที่แล้ว +3

    All I thought about throughout the intro was that I went out of my way to buy a "misanthrope"crop top with the definition on it, off of someone's Etsy store just so I don't have to socialize to explain why I'm so antisocial.

  • @PianoWithBeth
    @PianoWithBeth 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Gosh, I related to this video so much. The editing - seeing the look on your own face when you realise someone is listening / watching you. The switch from open and chatty to shut down and hyper vigilant. And the line about "going out of your comfort zone just makes your comfort zone smaller" - THANK YOU for that. I try to explain that to my partner. Exposure therapy doesn't work when the exposure is traumatic. It's not like it's just in my head - I'm outright rejected 90% of the time, for reasons I don't even understand, and I'm too tired to keep chasing the 10%, even though I know it would be life changing if I could "find my circle within a circle." Anyway. Thank you.

  • @bjorn54114
    @bjorn54114 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great vid. As a musician I often sing to myself during gigs something like "da da da only the musicians can see me" but at the same time I know music need hearing from people 😅 actually many people know how my drums sound but not how my voice sounds like 😂

  • @gwen4148
    @gwen4148 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It was so amazing to watch this video, I relate a lot to that sense of isolation, and doing it because your afraid of getting hurt and don’t want to be hurt like in the past, for me its taking everyday one step at time Im hopeful one day to also find my circle within a circle. Really awesome video

  • @xxlepusxx
    @xxlepusxx ปีที่แล้ว +2

    TW: depression, suicide ideation, and probably some other things...s
    I have been thinking about all these points for 4 days now. There are so many things I relate to, that I don't really know how to begin expressing myself.
    I'm trans and I'd like to voice train, but its not that I don't do it if someone is home. I don't do it if I think my neighbours might hear me. Because I hear everything that happens around, and I don't like having to hear neighbour's noises, I strive to avoid doing what I don't like.
    At the same time, I'm feeling quite isolated in several ways. In a big part it's my own doing, because I'm avoiding people, and social interactions often are exhausting. Also, depression, migraine and probably some damage related from being ill from covid recently. And nobody seems to care about covid anymore, and I must have gotten infected while grocery shopping or in the elevator/hallways...
    For an anecdote, a friend of mine understood that "social exhaustion" that I and someone else sometimes had when hanging out. But instead of like 1-2 days hanging out, after a week and a half of traveling, working and meeting people constantly.
    On another note, with how my health currently stands, and how it has been for the last couple of years, I find it hard to keep going. For the last three years I've been just about to end my university degree and I'm feeling exhausted, I'm feeling incapable of continuing.
    Something that might help with several things, would be moving back with my parents, and see if my health can improve somewhat. However, my history with my parents isn't the best. And moving back will probably worsen my mental health, because they aren't the kind of people I like to be around. In short time, the discussions about how I am not normal will come back and I'll wonder how I ever thought they could change.
    And, I have to think about my future, what can I do to sustain myself with my skills? I haven't worked anywhere yet as I was studying veterinary medicine. Yet, as my migraines screw all my attempts as forming routines of any kind, as they can hit at anytime and last for a couple of hours to more than a day. I doubt I can hold a regular 9-4 job. Freelancing would be ideal, working on what I have to when I can. Right now it's 5 am and I haven't slept because my sleep schedule is all over the place. I will probably fall asleep in a couple of hours. But most of the things I have seen that I could apply for to gain even a bit of money, are things I haven't learned enough to make a living. Art, drawing, commissions, edits, social media, content production, coding, accounting, creative writing... I don't know how to do any of those things properly yet. I know the basics because I'm curious, and have dipped my toes in everything, but not enough to work on anything. Jack of all trades master of none.
    Funnily enough, the best way to start would be to try and make something. But I find my mistakes paralyzing and often I give up soon afterwards, something I should leave for therapy...
    Even know, I'm feeling that this comment is stupid, I am making it 4 days after I first watched the video, and it's quite probable that no one will read it, or read it to the end. So what's the point? If it's just me figuring out how to communicate, writing to help me realize things, I can delete it and I won't have to trouble anyone. Not to mention the fact that I am talking about some stuff that probably deserves a trigger warning and I should reread this and edit them and add them.
    I won't delete this probably for a matter of pride because I told myself I wouldn't. But I'm tired of fighting against myself. I'm tired of living in such a hostile world. I'm tired of living in a world that often refuses to change, and I want to try to help to change the world. But I'm too exhausted to care too much. I'm numb from the pain I have experienced for so long. But I'll still try to move forward, I'll still keep trying to make changes to a world that doesn't want me. If only because the hope that I might change the life of a single person is the only thing that kept me from suicide when I was twelve. So, even if I don't know how, I'll keep living, and hopefully I can change some things.

  • @aquarhapsody
    @aquarhapsody ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I feel this so much. When I go in public, I wish for people to leave me alone. I feel them looking at and judging me, even for fleeting moments.
    In a previous video, you said you believe you also have ADHD. If you haven't already, you may also want to read about Rejection Sensitivity or Rejection Sensitive Dysphoria. I found that a lot of my social anxiety stemmed from this. Therapy and medication have helped, but it's still a challenge to not worry about other people observing and ostracizing me.

  • @nentendomofo
    @nentendomofo ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I wanted to thumbs up over and over again every minute of this video

  • @TheAnhedonicOne
    @TheAnhedonicOne ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It's no wonder how people like us can become misanthropes, when the interactions we have with others can simultaneously offer us less benefit than most people, and can hurt us more than most people. When you try to meet people, or just be out in the world, every single stranger has your heart in their hands. They could crush you and not even mean to. Who wants to risk that?

  • @sharlharmakhis280
    @sharlharmakhis280 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I'm autistic and have rather bad social anxiety. I socialise much better with the buffer of a computer screen and an internet connection between me and Other People.
    I often say that I don't hate people, I quite like people, I just have difficulty *trusting* people.

  • @emiloo1973
    @emiloo1973 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I liked the video and I liked your presentation of the struggles. I have social anxiety and mask as well. Never diagnosed with anything but depression, but to be fair I have never really been very vulnerable and totally honest with a therapist. Maybe it is just depression, maybe I am on the spectrum but I KNOW I struggle to understand social cues, am very self conscious, mask fairly well (most people think I am an extrovert but I absolutely am NOT), and suffer from a fair bit of misanthropy. Thank you for sharing your experience. This is the first video I have seen from you and will be checking out more of your channel now.

  • @stoicchaos
    @stoicchaos ปีที่แล้ว +1

    There were so many amazing things said in this video. I had never stopped to really notice how much weight I put behind even just perceiving myself in the mirror, let alone in the world. The ending segment where you opened up about the struggles of editing the video with footage of yourself really resonated and brought everything together and made it feel human. You might not have made the TikTok you wanted, but I feel like you’ve made great progress to that goal.

  • @DarkSoulsSauron
    @DarkSoulsSauron ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I really appreciate a video like this because it articulates why neurodivergent antipathy to society is more nuanced than our cultural understanding of the word misanthropy. Like, we all knew that cringey cishet white guy who called himself a misanthrope at school because he "hates everyone equally." who conveniently only hates on women and minorities, and differentiating *that* from the very valid anger of neurodivergents who are tired of being forced to choose between living authentically and masking to reduce friction from the neurotypicals.
    The joke about the anarchist commune really hit home for me, because I too am a service industry vet in my 30s and I spend so much time placating the feelings of neurotypicals because they insist on reading malicious intention out of small mistakes, or expect me to read subtext into words that mean the opposite of what they want. I like caring for people, I would love to continue to do service work even after capitalism dies because I think everyone deserves a chance to be treated well and cared for. Everyone deserves a night to put their feet up and not worry about doing the damn dishes for once. But the way capital pits the worker and the customer against each other for profit is exacerbated by a society where everyone expects you to read minds and never say aloud what they actually want.