How far should I go with educating people?

I had an appointment with my job coach today and, as I was waiting at the bus stop to get to town, an elderly lady came over and she started talking to me so I removed my headphones as I thought maybe she needed some help. It turned out she didn’t need help, she thought it was me who needed help with tuning into my environment and she started lecturing me that I should be listening to what’s happening around me, because as she said, there are kids in a school nearby playing and it means they’re happy. It did get me a bit upset but I didn’t say anything, and thank god, the bus came soon afterwards.

I am using my headphones to be able to hear less, that is the thing! Sometimes I listen to my favourite music, at other times I just use them as ear defenders. I didn’t feel like I had to explain myself to that lady, and anyway, there wasn’t enough time, but I guess the loud advocacy of some autistics made me think that I am a looser for not speaking up.

The appointment went well, and as I explained yesterday I am only acting as an introvert now when I’m with people, as I find it much less daunting than acting like a confident and chatty person. I still say what I want to say, I just try not to be too entertaining. But a few weeks ago the company my job coach works for lost it’s office so today the appointment was in a food court in a shopping centre. It wasn’t too busy and I’d not say it was particularly noisy but after around 50 minutes I’d started getting really annoyed and felt like I had to leave. I did think at first it was because of social contact and that I was still masking too much, and only after I left and put my headphones back on I realised that I didn’t used to feel like that at all when our appointments were in quiet meeting rooms. Strange, isn’t it? I really didn’t think it was particularly noisy, and yet, I felt annoyed. I wonder if possibly the remark from that elderly lady on the bus stop made it worse?

As I left I put my meditation music on and that made me feel better, thank god. It really feels like music for the soul right now.

I’m in a pub, a quiet one. I’m drinking a pint of cider. I can’t hear anything apart from my music. I tried pink noise for a bit and I was surprised because I love it at home sometimes, when I’m in a mood, it seems to help me create sensory heaven, but today, when I felt on the edge of a meltdown, it really didn’t work – it was just a noise, there was nothing pink about it.

At the moment I’m listening to Falling Stars by Delle Alpi. 30 minutes of meditation music brought me back to feeling absolutely calm, but I still have half of a glass of my cider left.

9 responses to “How far should I go with educating people?”

  1. That elderly lady sounds like quite the busybody. It’s really none of her business whether or not you have headphones on.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Do you think I should have told her that?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. She probably wouldn’t have reacted very well if you told her that.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. That’s what I thought, yes. Makes no sense to feel bad about not saying anything, yet I do.

        Liked by 1 person

      3. I think that if you’re going to be interesting regularly with someone or if they’re going to play a role in your life, the pros of saying something could start to outweigh the cons, but with a random person, there’s not much to be accomplished by saying something.

        Liked by 1 person

      4. That’s what I was thinking, thank you. I think I’m just confused with how loud some advocates can be.

        Liked by 1 person

      5. I think in person vs. social media makes a difference too. People can shout as loud as they want on social media and there aren’t likely to be repercussions for it, but it’s a lot harder to get away with that in person.

        Liked by 1 person

      6. Yes, makes sense, thank you 🙂 omg, I’m so socially confused!

        Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Magda Regula Cancel reply