Quote from: AnxietyDisord3r on July 19, 2016, 05:58:25 AM
I'm glad you feel reassured by my comment. I know what you mean about drugs making you zombified. I've been lucky I'm considered unable to take SSRIs because the next two drugs I tried didn't have such a profound dulling effect on my emotions. You are so right about ASD stopping people from helping or understanding. People call us slow, but a lot of supposedly "emotionally intelligent" people have a really hard time relating to folks that are aneurotypical. If you're really emotionally intelligent, wouldn't you be able to see past the stimming and the other weird quirks and see our humanity?
Depression is still poorly understood despite all the drugs they have now. There are multiple brain hormone cycles involved in depression and how they interact with each other isn't really well understood either. You seem to be coping pretty well unmedicated. I feel like I did too but I'm glad I have the drugs for now. I am hopeful that I can come off them eventually. (Certainly when I was on Lithium it was a major goal to transition off simply because you can't take that one forever.) I'd much rather live this way than live with that depressive sinkhole that you fall into without warning.
Yeah ASD can be a barrier to many things. Only this evening my boyfriend told me how most of the time I just appear to tolerate his existence, with very little additional emotion or affection. He often calls me a robot. I do love him, but I show it in other ways, which clearly are undetectable to him

You are so right in that many folks (no matter how 'in-tune' they think they are) can't get that severe OCD doesn't mean I'm a bad person, or not worth knowing. Heck, doing everything 8 times compulsively at least means I'm thorough

My depression coping strategy basically sucks. I set a date for when I'm going to commit suicide, and depending on how I feel at the time, that date can be months or even years away. Conversely it can be days or hours away too, and occasionally it becomes imminent, hence my suicidal history. Not good really.
Also, having such an outlook means I don't have a pension or anything that involves future planning, for obvious reasons.
I can easily see that taking meds to avoid such "suicidal sinkholes" (good term, BTW) is a much better coping strategy. But whenever I've admitted to anyone that I still suffer from depression, even after I've transitioned, they have invariably said that they thought my depression should have gone away post-transition, and hence maybe I've made a big mistake with transitioning at all. Talking rarely, if ever, helps. There are a few gems that I come across though, like your post, that are an oasis in a desert of despair.