Nov. 20th, 2004

jay: (contemplative)
In couples counselling last night, [profile] patgreene and I talked about stress in our lives, and the really bad things happening to some of our friends, and to issues that had come up over the past week. Including the tangled communications and mutual incorrect assumptions that led to bruised feelings last Monday night. But that opened the door my looking at how I respond to approaching groups of people, generally.

I wait, hold back from groups of people until someone expressly invites me or indicates that it is OK to join the group, conversation, seating, or whatever. I can't bring myself to just walk over, and assume I'll be welcomed. I wait, standing apart (and probably seeming standoffish or distant) while often desperately wishing that someone would welcome me over.

Why is this.... unlike other behaviors which vary across social vs. work environments, this fear-of-group-approaches holds universally for me. Coming up to and joining groups of colleagues at a reception at a technical conference is just as hard as asking for a seat at a social discussion group. It isn't about self-worth, really... I feel like I have gifts to offer, or valuable perspectives.

Last night, I discovered that it appears to run deeply, back again to childhood experiences. I was a social outcast and stigmatized and bullied and physically beaten by groups. Others were afraid to associate with me, lest they suffer similarly. And I'm a natural extrovert, drawn to groups and people and socializing. So this lonely 8-10 year old kept approaching peer groups, only to be routinely be driven away with insults and abuse. Sometimes they threw rocks en masse to drive me away... literally stoning me. In junior high and high school, I wouldn't be attacked -- peers would simply dissipate when I approached, or else talk as though I was invisible. The only exception was if a friend or classmate explicitly invited me to join their discussion or group (this usually meant that they wanted help with homework ;) at which point I would be treated like a human being.

So, I have a deeply-ingrained aversion to just approaching any group, and reflexively wait for an overt invitation before joining. And assume, unconsciously, that to barge in on any social setting without an invitation is to instead invite attack or abuse.

So if I seem standoffish, or holding back... it doesn't mean I don't want to hang out with you or your friends. It may be that I really, really would like to do so... but am desperately awaiting an all-clear signal before approaching. It's about me, not you or your groups.

May 2009

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