Autism & how Repressed Anger contributes to Dissociation/ Alexithymia

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The Thought Spot

The Thought Spot

Күн бұрын

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Time stamps:
Intro 00:00-02:34
My History with Anger 02:35-09:01
Effects of Repressed Anger 09:02-20:31
Intellectualizing Enables Suppression 20:32-24:28
Breaking the Cycle 24:29-29:20
Food for Thought 29:21-45:13
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Пікірлер: 422
@millabasset1710
@millabasset1710 Ай бұрын
Growing up with autism, my parents and teachers never allowed me to be angry.
@Reed5016
@Reed5016 Ай бұрын
Same. It felt like people didn’t are about the way I felt, and they didn’t understand me. I don’t know about the first part of that, but the sec part is 100% true.
@millabasset1710
@millabasset1710 Ай бұрын
@@Reed5016I was too nice growing up to the point of being naive, I’m careful who I show empathy towards
@millabasset1710
@millabasset1710 Ай бұрын
@@Reed5016 also it sucks being 31 and single since 20. I’m better off dating a woman with autism like myself.
@Reed5016
@Reed5016 Ай бұрын
@@millabasset1710Honestly, same. I’m a people pleaser to my core now, and a lot of people take advantage of me.
@millabasset1710
@millabasset1710 Ай бұрын
@@Reed5016I ditched my high school friends recently, I was taken advantage of for years and enabled it. Also it’s telling when you’re the one initiating conversations and the other ones aren’t. I’ve had fake friends flaking on me for several years.
@toontown13579
@toontown13579 Ай бұрын
I never allowed myself to b angry- thought I was being selfless by transmuting it into a quiet sadness. It just made me perpetually quietly sad! Here’s to unlearning. 👊
@TheCakeIsALie422
@TheCakeIsALie422 Ай бұрын
My anger is so intense, and scares me so much. I’m getting better at allowing it to be expressed in healthy ways, but repressing it for so long has turned it into something very frightening and unfamiliar.
@quryil
@quryil Ай бұрын
Yea I get that, but I'd be fine if I could let it out
@T.JacobMain
@T.JacobMain Ай бұрын
Same. I experienced very traumatic things last year, making me lose control and lash out and scream, which i never ever did in my life, this made a horrible impact on my physical health, especially my heart. Now im living with constant fear of not being able to control myself and my emotions. I don't even know what to do about it. Because every time I've reacted to my anger, my body got internally hurt in some ways
@Vessel_A
@Vessel_A Ай бұрын
Same
@KateFrancis-eo2rp
@KateFrancis-eo2rp 23 күн бұрын
Yeah I think this has happened to me too! I don't feel like myself.
@chyeahfurries
@chyeahfurries 17 күн бұрын
same omfg
@MartianGirl347
@MartianGirl347 Ай бұрын
“Holding on to anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intent of throwing it at someone else; you are the one who gets burned” -Buddha Anger was the #1 family emotion for us.
@guyyouseewhenyoudie
@guyyouseewhenyoudie Ай бұрын
Wow! That’s great. This Buddha guy knew his stuff.
@gothboschincarnate3931
@gothboschincarnate3931 Ай бұрын
I hate Buddha...his life was overpriveledged, and he got a lot of things wrong.
@Skittenmeow
@Skittenmeow Ай бұрын
​@@gothboschincarnate3931hate is a very strong word, for someone you have never met or even heard speak. I don't want to diminish your feeling, I don't want need you to reply, I'm hoping to spark ideas to get you to explore your feelings. Because I used to be really bad at knowing my feelings, and repressing (still working on it), and realised pertained I was misdirecting my anger towards completely external "figureheads/ avatars" Humans are human, we all get a lot of stuff wrong, that's okay. Doesn't mean any single one of us can't hold wisdom. Doesn't mean getting stuff wrong means someone gets everything wrong. Hating someone you've never met, is as harmful as loving someone you've never met. For me it's misdirected emotions about real life interactions because I couldn't express "negative" emotions like anger, pain, grief, fear, sadness, loneliness...or that feeling that no matter my attempts to find answers there were never answers. For you it could be different, and it could be that this doesn't warrant exploring. But try trust that I'm writing this comment with good intentions, even though I'm a stranger on the internet
@Baptized_in_Fire.
@Baptized_in_Fire. Ай бұрын
​@@gothboschincarnate3931his followers got a lot wrong. Very few ever knew what he was talking about
@CindySmith-vd7xh
@CindySmith-vd7xh Ай бұрын
​@gothboschincarnate3931 hey at least you're honest about it
@nickonerd
@nickonerd Ай бұрын
This explains so much! I was forced to mask and repress anger because I was constantly invalidated for my emotions at a certain age range. My anger and sadness was never taken seriously in my teenage years, gaslit by my mother as "becoming psychotic" when she would become explosive and threw things and me screaming to "shut it". I have CPTSD from that... took me another decade before I realized I need to express my anger and defend my right to, especially when there is a wrong being done!
@saininj
@saininj Ай бұрын
Did we all have the same mother? I swear, this spoke to me. I hope you're healing my friend.
@nickonerd
@nickonerd Ай бұрын
@@saininjthankfully it's been over a decade since those years, she did genuinely love me but it seemed like a ton of stigma and stereotypes she held against me came from the diagnosis I had at the time.
@quryil
@quryil Ай бұрын
As I got older I'd be told stop acting like a 5yo when I was most likely having a meltdown. I have SO much but it can't get OUT
@clivematthews95
@clivematthews95 Ай бұрын
@@saininjexactly, I fully relate too! I swear we all had the same mother 😄. OP I’m really sorry, I hope you’re feeling a little bit better as you get older ❤
@clivematthews95
@clivematthews95 Ай бұрын
@@saininjexactly, I fully relate too! I swear we all had the same mother 😄. OP I’m really sorry, I hope you feel a little bit better as you get older ❤
@sarahwilsonuk
@sarahwilsonuk Ай бұрын
Underlying my anger is sadness or anxiety. Expressing it physically or vocally and then crying is normally the only way I release it.
@GoodJuju333
@GoodJuju333 Ай бұрын
I always say anger is usually sadness in a trench coat
@oksanakaido8437
@oksanakaido8437 Ай бұрын
For me, fear is often what underlies anger.
@ReneeDeane
@ReneeDeane 25 күн бұрын
Also, depression is anger turned inward. I wasn't allowed to be angry - even frustrated with normal things that anyone would be angry or frustrated about. Its led to a lifetime of depression.
@Claudia_lost
@Claudia_lost Ай бұрын
By repressing and intellectualizing our emotions and ourselves in any and every ways possible. We are washing away our authentic self. We are completely ignoring our intuition and we do pay the price. We're all on our own path Irene. These break throughs are precious, these moments genuinely make me realize what the meaning of Gratitude is. I'm seriously grateful for this video because even tho I'm on my own journey currently, I found so many nuggets of wisdom in your video. Thank you so much!!❤ Edit: Working out and blasting music is still my favourite way to process my anger. I've never been so regulated than when I was regularly working out.
@VytauteMarija
@VytauteMarija Ай бұрын
As an autistic woman who is also trying to spread awareness here, this video is SO ON POINT TO WHAT I'M GOING THROUGH! I can't wait to finish it, but I just had to comment! ❤❤❤
@crankydragon
@crankydragon Ай бұрын
When I was in jr high I learned how to death-growl because I was really into horror movies and death metal. It's great because it engages your vocal cords int the same way singing falsetto does which allow you to ful- force-scream at a low volume.
@quryil
@quryil Ай бұрын
Ha cool I need to do that
@itznia_ok8069
@itznia_ok8069 Ай бұрын
​@@quryilsame
@nativedeath
@nativedeath Ай бұрын
Def learning how to do gutterals is an awesome way to let out the full force of a top-of-your-lungs scream but at a volume that can be very acceptable even if you’re around people. I work in a kitchen and I do it all the time. Alongside the noise and volume of the kitchen it just sounds like an annoyed grunt. People will prolly still look at you weird, but not in the same way as screaming out loud will.
@crankydragon
@crankydragon 23 күн бұрын
BTW, anybody can do it too. You don't have to be some 250lb dude. "Pisces" by Jinjer
@itznia_ok8069
@itznia_ok8069 23 күн бұрын
@crankydragon one of my favorites from them!
@unrulycrow6299
@unrulycrow6299 Ай бұрын
Repressing the anger has been feeding my depression because it got turned against me. As a teen, it also led to ED issues. Last year, for the first time I allowed myself to get angry at others and it felt GOOD. It lasted MONTHS because it was years of repressed anger coming out at once and it was so painful to deal with.
@fatymah1138
@fatymah1138 Ай бұрын
this is happening to me right now, as i’m past the point of demonizing anger from family issues. i’m very trigger happy to express it when its deserved, and it’s definitely a learning experience
@clivematthews95
@clivematthews95 Ай бұрын
Don’t let it bottle up. You’re a human being, allow yourself to be angry and express it the moment you feel it, but of course, in a productive way, love you 💛
@Lady.Fern.
@Lady.Fern. Ай бұрын
It’s so freaky to go your entire life misunderstood and then finally find videos of others speaking on your exact thoughts and connections it’s such a relief off my shoulders but feels like it’s not even real life. To know I’m not the only one who thinks this way has saved my life. Thank you for sharing your thoughts and experiences (and all other AuDHD creators) it’s helping people more than you may ever realize.
@unicookies4
@unicookies4 Ай бұрын
I developed Dissociative Identity Disorder because of these exact issues. I went from never truly remembering or understanding the feeling of anger to it being the most overwhelming strongest emotion I ever had and I still struggle with managing it till this day. Now I am unable to not allow myself to feel my emotions and express them. Even if I try to suppress my emotions, it’s only a matter of time until I have a meltdown.
@heatheranne9305
@heatheranne9305 Ай бұрын
DID. Me too. It's so hard. No one ever thought Autism, because DID is all they could see. DID is an extreme form of masking, in my opinion.
@CindySmith-vd7xh
@CindySmith-vd7xh Ай бұрын
Omg yallllll this exact thing happened to me too. I feel not so alone in my experience
@CindySmith-vd7xh
@CindySmith-vd7xh Ай бұрын
​@@heatheranne9305yes I think this is highly likely
@Vlad_the_Impaler
@Vlad_the_Impaler Ай бұрын
Never drive when emotional. It is more dangerous than being drunk.
@heedmydemands
@heedmydemands Ай бұрын
Shit that's very worrying
@bettingonme13
@bettingonme13 Ай бұрын
I'm AuDHD and grew up in a similar environment so this is really relatable. I learned to resent my anger because I automatically associated it with abuse. Thank you for being vulnerable with your story and speaking to the importance of allowing ourselves to feel anger ❤
@chummer2060
@chummer2060 Ай бұрын
I was a super angry kid. Pretty early on, though, I had to teach myself to bury it. I did that for years. I remember the movie Anger Management really stuck with me. I didn't realize how angry I actually was. I kept dissociating for YEARS until a few years back. My wife and I were dating and she told me that I was "watching TV in my head" around my family. I didn't even realize I had been tuned out for so long. This was all before I figured out I was neurodivergent. Here I am at 42, finally being more present in situations. I really connected with your description of screaming in the car. That's been a huge anger release for me. Tensing up and absolutely going berserk with shouting.
@corniduck
@corniduck Ай бұрын
Not only did I repress my anger out of fear of hurting others, I also intellectualized it in a not healthy way. Instead of just trying to understand what caused my anger, I systematically told myself out of it by gaslighting myself and minimizing or discrediting the reasons I was angry. Like I convinced myself that it wasn't so bad in order to avoid having to set my boundaries witch was to stressful for me. I only recently realized that my main compensatory strategy to avoid being perceived negatively was to not let myself think or feel anything other than what I thought I should think or feel. Witch is very messed up. It took me six years to understand that my job was destroying me because I didn't let myself feel, process or understand my negative emotions. I was told that having a lot of social connexions and helping people was a meaningful way of living that would make good people happy, and so I convinced myself that I loved doing it even thought it was too much socializing for me and then didn't understand why my physical and mental health were falling apart.
@janeangl1423
@janeangl1423 18 күн бұрын
I'm going through the exact same things right now (I'm still not sure if I have AuDHD). I have never felt angry until about a year ago when I started therapy, and even then, I didn't know what to do with the feeling, dismissed it, and my issues worsened. It wasn't until about two months ago when I started struggling with derealization and depersonalisation (as a result of ending a very important friendship that turned toxic) that I realised what I have been doing to myself all my life and was finally able to start my healing journey. It's rough. But I'm starting to accept myself and dig into the unpleasant stuff in order to listen to and understand myself better. And it was so healing to me to read your experience and feel understood. Thank you very much for sharing. It feels good to feel less alien.
@ZeonGenesis
@ZeonGenesis Ай бұрын
So accurate about women repressing anger and autoimmune diseases. Men struggle with being allowed to show sadness and vulnerability, but women aren't allowed to express boundaries and anger when boundaries have been crossed, because god forbid we're hysterical, etc. Our anger is pathologized when it is something that has gone behind every revolution for women's rights. Anger is a threat to patriarchy. So express! In a healthy way ofc ;).
@re_i1
@re_i1 Ай бұрын
I’m only 9 minutes but I wanna say I’m glad you listened to your intuition to talk about this because this is something I really REALLY need to hear and immediately resonated with so thank you 🫶🏾
@life_aftersobriety
@life_aftersobriety Ай бұрын
Wow so much to unpack, you’ve inspired me to go and scream my anger out on my car. 31 years of anger
@francescakyanda9182
@francescakyanda9182 22 күн бұрын
I do this all the time!
@boinkadoinkk
@boinkadoinkk Ай бұрын
I grew up as the eldest child/daughter and the family 'mediator' between my divorced parents and younger siblings..... this hits me SO hard, the anger eventually forced it's way out when I completely fell apart mentally as a late teen and developed a serious binge drinking problem and self-harm addiction :(
@flyygurl18
@flyygurl18 Ай бұрын
🙏
@GenG123456789
@GenG123456789 Ай бұрын
Sounds like “fawning” which is usually a survival strategy from trauma. I think some autistics struggle to stop their anger coming out. Personally, anger was the only “negative” emotion I was allowed to express growing up because I was raised in a typical repressed British household. Crying or being sad was absolutely not allowed. So everything would bubble under the surface until it all exploded out in anger. I need to learn how to identify what I’m actually feeling underneath the anger and how to express it instead of anger.
@kimbernimue7721
@kimbernimue7721 Ай бұрын
As a 28y/o afab previously undiagnosed Au/HD person, I *needed* this. I have never felt more heard by anyone, especially someone who's never met me; the parallels between what you were saying and what I've experienced were almost too much to bear. It feels so obvious now why I'm always in pain, more than anything thank you for giving me ideas and new ways to heal/cope. Take care,
@clivematthews95
@clivematthews95 Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing 🙏🏾
@fuzzycrafter9793
@fuzzycrafter9793 22 күн бұрын
I often feel guilty for expressing anger, and think that "I'm a nice person, I shouldn't get angry at people, that makes them feel bad, and it isn't really their fault." I notice that I'm starting to do that intellectualizing thing, focusing on "Ok, what am I feeling, why am I feeling it, this isn't a good emotion, let's find out where it's coming from and make it stop." I needed the reminder to let it out - this applies to other things too, not just anger! Guilt, shame, anything that I dislike, I tend to repress. Thank you for talking about this.
@darkstarr984
@darkstarr984 13 күн бұрын
Yes! It’s useful to acknowledge where the feeling comes from, but it’s not okay to use that acknowledgment to stop feeling it.
@marlosmith5154
@marlosmith5154 Ай бұрын
As the oldest child in my family I was so concerned with being the peace-maker that I was made to feel like I couldn't let myself feel anything. I was never in sports but I felt a similar sort of release being involved in singing groups and theater growing up. It's been really great to rediscover those creative outlets in adulthood because music has truly always been the main thing that has made me feel seen. ❤
@wiegraf9009
@wiegraf9009 14 күн бұрын
That's true I can kind of express my anger through music even if it is suuuuuuuper repressed. I was parentified by two parents who could not self-regulate so I always had to be the regulator for them and that created a lot of unhealthy patterns.
@laurainrevison1162
@laurainrevison1162 Ай бұрын
On point Irene. Anger is an emotion just like happiness or sadness. Finding healthy ways to express the anger is key. I've read that monks are at a high risk for diabetes. They found a link between repressing anger and diabetes. So the body really does keep the score. ❤
@vampmilf
@vampmilf Ай бұрын
As an autistic woman who deals with this exact same issue myself and has been getting close to this realization, I'm so glad and appreciative that you've made the connection and made this video. It should be a gem and vital resource for every autistic woman to watch. It got so bad for me that I spent a year struggling with severe dissociation and have only now come out of it and begun to connect to myself again. Being completely cut off from yourself and from your emotions and life is such a sad way to exist. I've also struggled with self-harm. This video has encouraged me to begin expressing and releasing my anger in safe and healthy ways so that I can make the next step in my personal growth. Thank you so much, truly. P.S: Funnily enough, I had the exact same experience as you. After an argument with someone where I couldn't regulate myself, I left and as I was driving home I couldn't take it anymore and started screaming and screaming.
@MissingRaptor
@MissingRaptor Ай бұрын
The method of expressing my anger that works best for me is having an angry rant. Vocalizing the specific things that are making me angry, especially in the presence of a person who understands that I am just getting it out and that it is not an attack towards them. Having someone who can witness my anger really helps dissipate it. I usually find that I have tons of energy afterwards. Mostly, my anger wants to be heard. Because of this, I am also someone who is happy to listen to someone else's angry rants. It's very cathartic.
@alyssajennings8668
@alyssajennings8668 Ай бұрын
I highly highly recommend the book On Our Best Behavior: The Seven Deadly Sins and the Price Women Pay to Be Good by Elise Loehnen. She talks about how this is a struggle for ALL women due to being forced to *not* be angry and most women do not know how to process their anger and it comes out in other ways. Of course, this is wayyyy more for us with asd. When I read the chapter on Wrath, this was the epiphany that I had as well. You're not alone.
@cupofoats
@cupofoats Ай бұрын
I have a similar realisation a couple of weeks ago. This is extremely validating, thank you. I'm not sure if I'm able to word it correctly, but I'm trying. I didn't realise I was dissociating for years, it really changed the way I'm expressing myself now. I had a lot of anger in my in my feelings but I'm never able to express it. Instead I was depressed, but I didn't know how to put the way my brain works into words. I didn't know I was autistic until 30 years later. I'm chronically ill. I shut down sometimes, but it's not really what I mean by dissociating constantly - my brain was automatically daydreaming and repeating harmful memories at every chance it got. I wasn't able to focus when I sat down without doing anything, I always was in a different world when I disassociated. I HAD to watch, read, play, do anything in order to distract me from my thoughts but the act of doing this is also me dissociating. It was a symptom. Often I realised I wasn't focusing but I wasn't able to to do anything about it. One day I was in car as a passenger after I have this realisation and I tried to be in the present and I couldn't last for a minute. Not even a minute. It breaks my heart that my traumas could dig this deeply without me realising it. I thought that this was how everyone with depression felt like. It's no wonder that I'm chronically tired, by brain is working overtime.
@quryil
@quryil Ай бұрын
Yea I am (have been for idk how long now) stuck in that *always* NEEDING music or anything to tune out my thoughts so I can "focus" on a task
@monkiesbanana321
@monkiesbanana321 Ай бұрын
Oh my god. I could have written this except I havent had a realization yet until this video maybe
@johnwilliammaxwell5044
@johnwilliammaxwell5044 Ай бұрын
This one really hit me hard. I have a terrible relationship with my own anger, and I'm only just now struggling to allow myself to ever feel angry, but I've had so many years of dissociating to avoid it that I can't even cry when I need to. Interestingly, one of the things that I've always turned to without even realizing why (long before I even knew I was AuDHD) is extreme, harsh music. So when I'm extremely disregulated and don't have the tools to cope, listening to death metal at high volume is one of the only things that calms me. Since becoming aware of it, I have also found some research to support the notion that extreme music can be helpful for people who struggle with emotional processing.
@Natvaesen
@Natvaesen Ай бұрын
Ugh, my whole life since puberty!!! I was bullied in school, and the anger from that time still haunts me now as a 35 year old. I still haven't released any of it properly, but I find that listening to aggressive music (I'm mainly a metal-head) helps... I discovered that for myself in my teens. One more thing I like to do when feeling intense anger is punching the air while holding a dumb bell in each hand! That or using a rowing machine at the gym. Buuut going to a live metal concert beats all of them :3 I grew up in a veeeery calm family, and anger was a hostile emotion to show, so I repressed it in order to not scaring or upsetting people around me... Even the ones that made me so angry. I became unhealthily calm on the outside and constantly anxious on the inside. Thank you for talking about this, Irene
@hannahk.summerville5908
@hannahk.summerville5908 Ай бұрын
Without anger you become a doormat and are extremely at the mercy of others (ability to stop themselves). My home life was a war zone. I got beaten up regularly, had to watch my sister being hit as well. My anger and stubbornness were the only thing that made me able to hang on for dear life. I've been in chronic fight response for ages. I have no issues with arguments. But I had to work with my rage because a part of me was still stuck on the battlefield fighting for it's life. Reactive and locked in. Like a dog having another in a death grip. Underneath is deep deep powerlessness and grief. Tons and tons of grief. To me it's much easier to 'step into the ring' than go into that. Because it feels like i would just cry for years. And that energy is a lot lower than anger. Anger moves shit. Wild ride eh? Everyone has different layers to feel. Somatic work is great. Some yoga chest opening made me instant cry too. Be sure to be grounded enough so your nervous system can deal. Ps: Oh yeah, I did martial arts for 12 years and boy was I way more chill back then. Planning to get back into it.
@MelissaPons
@MelissaPons Ай бұрын
As a grown up woman I still have friends and notice that many people who see anger as something just unhealthy or highly transitory. Being angry helped me tremendously to move away from bad situations and abusive relationships without fear, attachment, resentment or feelings of guilt. Anger helps, it gives you strength and motivates for change, as mentioned in the video. That being said I'm not anger charged and I'm not going around kicking stuff on the street or I am mean to people. No. It's very directed to the situations and / or people who had affected me and it has protected me from those. That energy (that you talk about in the video) is just amazing!
@burnteffigy87
@burnteffigy87 Ай бұрын
Audher here as well as Survivor of childhood abuse and currently becoming an Art Therapist. This video essay came at a perfe t moment when I'm writing my current essay on Disenfranchised Grief and it's sibling Anger
@melonwaternom
@melonwaternom 20 күн бұрын
For me, listening to "angry" music like metal and punk + moving my body (doing high intensity exercise) has always helped. I think listening to metal music in particular taught me that it is ok to be angry, and there are many ways to express it.
@mars8378
@mars8378 Ай бұрын
The crying thing has been happening to me recently! All of a sudden, everything has started to make me cry. I remember being scared when it started lol, because even things like car commercials where a mom comes home to her kids after a long day would have me tearing up. I’ve always been told I’m a very emphatic person, loud and memorable, but I think a lot of that came from not knowing what I was feeling and just acting how I thought I was supposed to. Also having zero sense of tonal or volume control 😂. Since ive started to cry very randomly, I’ve been trying to express it to my roommates and friends, but no one else I’ve known seems to understand it. So this video made me feel very seen. It also gave me an explanation for a change in my life which I couldn’t explain, a ‘why’ for my emotional disregulation, which is great because now I feel like I can work on processing it better! So thank you for sharing❤️
@asentientgoose
@asentientgoose Ай бұрын
I have so much repressed anger and frustration. It seemed like all the NT’s around me were able to express that, but not me. I had to be on my best behaviour to be accepted. I realise now that I struggle extremely with setting boundaries - I just don’t, and isolate instead. It feels so lonely living this way. I feel like I don’t have the “right” to express my boundaries because I’m a fundamentally broken person. Sighs.
@user-lh8xz6zs4s
@user-lh8xz6zs4s Күн бұрын
Dont internalize boundary issue so much often we expect outcomes inconsistent with reality which deepens pain. Most ppl who violate common boundaries, do it systemically and pathological ly, to one degree or some other. I’m saying this to say the presumption is there is an assertion method that will result in your boundary being accepted by others this is wrong. Ppl who are going to violate your boundaries do so bc of there behavioral precedents, become incompatible
@crystalfaunt8991
@crystalfaunt8991 Ай бұрын
I really have lost count of how many of your videos have made me cry from just feeling connected and understood. I'm in my late 30s and taking this long to realize your autistic truly feels like so much of your life has been stolen. Re anger: I've spent too many years in toxic home situations, just like you, trying to be calm and quiet. At it's worst it would feel like the fucking sun was inside my chest. I've also done a lot of screaming and crying in my car on the highway. Going on challenging technical hikes is another favorite, though living in the plains makes that less accessible unfortunately... Another thing I've recently realized I used to deal with everything, anger, my need to stim, escapism etc is GOING TO CONCERTS. I've been to 300+ in my lifetime and just always found them so cathartic. I never questioned it but boy, being able to scream and yell and headbang and go insane in a mosh pit was always just the best feeling in the world for me. Not being able to go to shows COVID era put me in a pretty heavy depressive state. Anyway! Thank you for your content, it's always appreciated
@aaronsu4267
@aaronsu4267 Ай бұрын
Irene, this video has such perfect timing for me. I feel like all of this is what I’ve wanted to express, but I was worried people would t understand. I remember having the same process recording myself a voice memo. Starting off with my Alexithymia, intellectualization, then inner child work, real rage mixed with sadness, strong emotions in my chest and stomach, and then grieving for my childhood. I keep catching myself thinking I’ve “gotten over it” because my life continues to move within a routine, but it’s reminders like this that help me to return to those primal emotions and the grieving process.
@_ayannaxo
@_ayannaxo Ай бұрын
I just started the video but i have been recently diagnosed with autism after being diagnosed with OCD (somatic and existential subtypes) & a dissociative disorder a year and a half ago. My narcissistic and emotionally abusive relationship with my ex had triggered a lot of mental health issues while also shining light on my autistic traits, which encouraged me to get tested for it. I built up a lot of resentment towards my ex throughout the 2 year relationship and I also witnessed my parents' domestic abuse. All of the childhood and romantic relationship traumas formed my avoidant attachment style and triggered a freeze trauma repsonse. My brain learned to disconnect from my environment and body during stressful periods. However, the DPDR (derealization/depersonalization) symptoms just created more anxiety. I constantly suppressed my emotions and trauma, appearing fine and numb on the outside but I was interally screaming and panicking. It really is unhealthy to keep things bottled up as you mentioned because the harmful stored energy can manifest as physical illnesses, imbalances, and negative projection. I am grateful to come across another autistic person that notices the correlation with autism and dissociation. This topic is rarely discussed. ❤
@tomsale5142
@tomsale5142 19 күн бұрын
Does your OCD cause pain I have heds autism ADHD pain is worst symptom
@unpalette8732
@unpalette8732 Ай бұрын
repressing anger bc I'm deeply resentful about how others have expressed it in the past and becoming a rational funny monk in how I express myself in anger and around anger is my favorite gender fr
@GloamyGrimCore
@GloamyGrimCore Ай бұрын
I SEE you, I feel you. All of this, my parents were angry, and I didn’t want to make it worse. Never wanting to express anger has been incredibly harmful.
@CosmicSailorV
@CosmicSailorV Ай бұрын
“Maybe I saved so many different people in different situations, but the one person I was not saving and was actually actively harming, was myself.” God damn that hit me so hard and resonate with it so much. Truly have so much to unpack. Thank you so much for helping me find the words to describe how I’ve been feeling for all these years. As a late diagnosed 30 y/o Autistic, your videos have been so helpful ❤
@Cocoanutty0
@Cocoanutty0 Ай бұрын
I’m so glad someone is taking about this. I deal with constant anger now and it seems to be linked to stimulation and sensitivities. But no one else has made a video about this. I’m exited to watch!
@GoodJuju333
@GoodJuju333 Ай бұрын
I recently started a full time job at an elementary school where I work specifically and more intensively with kids who have autism, adhd, or other neuro-divergent proclivities and your content has helped me a lot in my own understanding and in practice ❤
@PeaceOfMindLPC
@PeaceOfMindLPC Ай бұрын
Thanks for covering this topic Irene you are always ahead of the curve. As a clinical mental health counselor I work with clients who are Neurodivergent especially immigrants. I've noticed women who repressed their anger chronically once they become mothers or reach menopause, the anger is almost uncontrollable.
@pedrova8058
@pedrova8058 Ай бұрын
17:55 I think it's the most complete summary that can be made of the relationships issues of many of us here, and intersects with delay processing, or with problems accepting our own intuition (it's easy to fall into rationalization and ignore bodily sensations)..
@immortalsugimandudeguy
@immortalsugimandudeguy Ай бұрын
I’m so happy you listened to your intuition and uploaded this. Just as you said halfway through the video, I also have been really processing memories, learning how to do it emotionally, rather then just logically accepting that they happened. I just finished reading “What my Bones Know” by Stephanie Foo. One of the most profound and validating experiences on CPTSD I’ve read so far. And now this video, seems we’re all going through a major progression and understanding rn. How beautiful.
@ilovecatsandsynths9702
@ilovecatsandsynths9702 Ай бұрын
Wow…. I need to purge my emotions after this one. Like you, I’m a highly sensitive/empathic person who is also autistic. When you were talking about how children are able to better regulate themselves, as we get older we’re brainwashed to think we have to suppress or not express our emotions because it’s “impolite” or “inappropriate”… which it is in some circumstances, but for males at least, we’re conditioned to believe that “boys don’t cry” etc. and we end up repressing our feelings, bottling them up inside. I’ve been working for the past 6 years, ever since my wife left me, to release all the trauma I’ve accumulated in my 57 plus years of existence. I also get the feeling from watching your videos that you’re also an empath and are intuitive… you listen to your higher self. Sometimes we block ourselves off from our higher selves when we bottle up our anger and other painful emotions. Also, after you’ve finished screaming into your pillow and want to go into a meditative calm, check out my piece “Prom Night” on my channel. I also have 1 hour of “green noise” that you can use to block out noise to relax.
@divided_by_dia446
@divided_by_dia446 Ай бұрын
About breaking the cycle, there is a therapy called "modal therapy", which is about identifying modes in your psyche and letting them talk, e.g. your inner hurt child, or your happy child, your healthy adult, your punitive adult and so on. In modal therapy, you sit on chairs, impersonating those modes of yourself. Another way to get that insight, that the repression of anger is passed on to your child, is identifying, that this is what your punitive adult mode or others might've done to the child modes, in a try to protect it from emotional and physical harm. Its really eye opening, im glad you had that realization :) it can be really hard to find that middleground between over managing your inner childs emotions, therefore repressing them from feeling it and leaving your child on its own, abandoning it. The approach you name, giving it tools it the best and healthiest option in my opinion, i am proud of you that you have come to this conclusion I'd also love to hear about your relationship to autonomy (havent watched the video fully yet, maybe that is another thing that is also talked about)
@libelula1715
@libelula1715 Ай бұрын
cried towards the end of listening to it - I also have endo, got diagnosed last year. I've always been the designated level headed, calm person since I was a kid. The chest exercises you mention are heart openers, those make me cry too. I've been feeling so disconnected lately, this was a much needed reminder - made me think about my observation on how nice people at heavy metal concerts seem to be. This also made me think of when Aang was going through the chakras but he refused to release his attachment to Katara. Wishing you the best on your Saturn return 💜.
@19Pheonix96
@19Pheonix96 25 күн бұрын
I have so many thoughts! I’m having the same discovery during my Saturn return. I just discovered I have a dissociative disorder (I’ve noticed a lot of audhd people have as well And I suspect it’s bc of the topic of this video + the trauma of no support and maliciously masking) and the first this to come up after somatic therapy was anger. I screamed for a long time the very next day. Once I did that I realized all the pain and tension I was in. I hear you and this video made me feel heard every single part. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ I also wanna add we did what we needed to survive- including the suppression.
@MissingRaptor
@MissingRaptor Ай бұрын
For those not into astrology, what she is saying about being in her Saturn Return is that she is in a time of learning some very hard lessons. After getting in touch with my anger, I too now cry every time anything feels intense. Good luck with your journey. It's intense. Maybe we'll meet one day on the other side.
@brittneyshawnee
@brittneyshawnee 29 күн бұрын
I've also found that driving around to scream in my car is the best way to let loose safely. I relate to many of your experiences with somatic self-care and moving through stuck emotions. I commend you on your healing journey!
@jmvanzalinge5023
@jmvanzalinge5023 Ай бұрын
I've repressed anger so much for so long that most of my childhood I thought I was immune to this feeling that plagued everyone else. Then, after having two kids out all became too much. Before I learned more about autism I was looking up mom rage. It would come out in small spurts but they were intense. It's gotten a little better over the years but mostly still suppressing. Thank you for the tips on how to channel this in a more healthy way.
@xXNibiNoNekoXx
@xXNibiNoNekoXx 23 күн бұрын
I relate to this video so hard, there's so many emotions I realized I suppressed because it was a defense mechanism and I've been trying to relearn them again. Anger is one of the hardest ones to feel, since I just never feel angry. Or choose not to, or logic it away, I dunno. It's so unnatural that it feels like I'm pretending to be angry sometimes. But if I could re teach myself to feel sadness and cry again, I can do this too some day. It helps reminding myself that anger happens when injustice occurs (to yourself or others) and should be used as a motivating tool. I wish everybody the best of luck on their self discovering journeys. ❤
@kellyschroeder7437
@kellyschroeder7437 Ай бұрын
Yup, so much learned helplessness and freezing and fawning.
@bue921
@bue921 20 күн бұрын
I have a lot internal anger issues and now I have my autism diagnosis is so crazy knowing that masking has a HUGE part in myself about repressing my emotions and my anxiety and how this clap back bc I feel so resentful about myself not able to standing up for me and my feelings
@cammie49
@cammie49 Ай бұрын
I’m realizing from your story that rage is underneath some of my autistic meltdowns. If I am at the point of sensory overload and then I get angry and then I get non verbal and then I feel guilty about being angry and then I meltdown and start screaming and swearing into a pillow and pounding on the mattress. When you are watching someone do this just say “let it out, your feelings are valid, don’t be afraid because letting it out is going to help you and it’s not hurting me or anyone else …we can put on headphones if needed”.
@violakarl6900
@violakarl6900 Ай бұрын
Always identified as an angry person and easily moved to tears (for release), still it's a dysfunctional relationship with anger as I struggle with setting boundaries. Super weird to hear people tell me, that they see me as a calm and relaxed person, as I struggeled to stay calm while upset until some years ago which lead to a lot of built up guilt. Maybe that's what I'm suppressing, my calmness and that's why other people see it more than I do. Very interesting to see the perspective of someone who struggeled to express anger. I occupied myself with psychosomatics quite a lot when I was younger, so I know chronic pain stems from repressed anger. Psychosomatics also helped me release some of my issues and get to know me better. Glad you had those realizations!
@dianaelizondo9632
@dianaelizondo9632 Ай бұрын
This is so relatable. Thanks for this video. I've repressed it a lot all my life. I'm still learning how to use it in productive ways, because I too have internalized it and not used it to remove me from unsafe situations, setting boundaries and just have swallowed it all.
@thevioletoracle
@thevioletoracle 7 күн бұрын
Omg! Okay so I'm also autistic. I'm 29 now, but I felt the same way. I never understood anger. I also grew up in an abusive home. I also have chronic pain. I could move through the feeling fo anger to the underlying feeling so quickly. Over time I just realized I was betraying myself by never validating my own emotions because I was so worried about regulating someone else. I'm also spiritual. Spirituality helped me connect to my emotions easier in terms of philosophy. I don't want to argue about it. When I finally unlocked my anger, it was explosive a bit. I didn't go off on people exactly but my boundaries were sort of slammed into place. I ruminate hard as well. But I couldn't regulate my anger at all. My therapist had told me it would come back. It took me a year to regulate my anger. But I think that my relationships are much healthier now that it's balanced. I never got to have anger as a kid. My emotions were never allowed to come out. I married someone who I had to regulate and man.. I'm just much healthier now. I feel likebi had to break so many relationships to rebuild them in a healthy way where I was being respected. And I am so sad about how I let myself be treated because I was strong to be calm. Eventually my anger balanced back out. I do have to be a lot more clear with my genuine emotions. Dancing and breathing exercises help my system the best. I scream sing in my car too and I have playlists for that. And I also workout quite a lot. ☺️ I make art and I write poetry too and that helps process my emotions. Goshhhh. I have lupus. An autoimmune disorder. I got diagnosed at 20 so I can't really say when that happened. We have so much in common. 💀
@bentonja668
@bentonja668 Ай бұрын
No one including myself was diagnosed with autism where I grew up in Arkansas. No one had even heard of autism. Anger from males was socially acceptable and even encouraged and I was able to effectively utilize my anger as fuel to achieve goals such as becoming very good at basketball.
@atanamorell2
@atanamorell2 Ай бұрын
I love this topic! Very timely for me. 54 yrs of anger repressed into my body and now I have MS. I really need to get a grip on this problem. It's literally destroying me.
@Zebo262
@Zebo262 Ай бұрын
I'm sorry that this is a difficult topic for you to share, but I greatly appreciate that you have. Thank you 💙💙 It sounds like you became the diplomat to ease the situation, to be able to see to your own needs. I think parts of the goal for healthily experiencing anger, can be staying calm like you shared,, in some situations. But also being able to express it, so you can learn where is a good place for you to sit with it. Sometimes it needs to come out, so that you're able to move past it. Sometimes it can also lead to really good things like being able to look for a way to move forwards, understanding each other better, making connections you couldn't see before, from what you've said it could also in some ways be seen as self care and many other things. A little like when a piece of land is crushed through some kind of destruction, then seeing flowers sprout from it in the middle of all of that destruction. ♋ I think kids don't stop to think about whether what they are going to say or do is appropriate, because they haven't learned the ways of being/ restrictions that adults have. They just feel/do/ say whatever is happening for them in that moment and get it out. There's no malice in it, no motive, other than that's what is happening for them
@kay_3705
@kay_3705 Ай бұрын
this resonates a little too much :,)) really appreciate you putting this into words and knowing I’m not the only one who feels like this
@goo9205
@goo9205 Ай бұрын
For the past couple weeks, I've been browsing through videos to better myself. This is exactly what I was looking for. I didn't know what I was feeling until I saw the title. Thank you!
@Jennifer-bw7ku
@Jennifer-bw7ku 4 күн бұрын
Psychedelics are just an exceptional mental health breakthrough. It's quite fascinating how effective they are against depression and anxiety. Saved my life.
@SunshineGrove04
@SunshineGrove04 Ай бұрын
My brother and father were violent. And my mother threatened to have them have them harm. And I am so sorry, for what you have been through.. 🫂🫂 and yes we are not to be angry when your privacy, your boundaries or belittled, mocked etc. It’s painful. As painful as it I am happy for to start your healing at 28 b/c it’s horrible to only recognizing it later in life like me at 44yrs old.
@photoelectron
@photoelectron Ай бұрын
for me, my aversion to anger sprouted from the times my dad got violent with me and my brother; i felt i didn't wanto to be like him, so i needed to not be angry and now i'm here, 36 yrs old, and still can't tell if i'm angry or just annoyed or what -_- thank you for these words; gives me lots to think about (=
@banovsky
@banovsky Ай бұрын
Irene, you are a legend. Truly, madly, deeply: thank you for this. You have an elegant way of expressing your thoughts while still respecting the vast amounts of processing and self-editing we tend to do. Your story landed close to home, and while I was the oldest son in my scenario, I can absolutely relate to swallowing my anger and holding every knife inward. Let’s hope this apartment has walls sturdy enough for 30+ years of trauma 😜
@akselalchemy
@akselalchemy Ай бұрын
Thank you so much for making this video. Myself and many of my loved ones are neurodivergent and have CPTSD and consequently have a really messed up relationship with anger - whether from repressing it constantly or repressing it and then boiling over and expressing it in unhealthy ways. This has been really helpful and validating. I actually sent it to all my roommates after i got about 20 minutes in. Thanks for being so open and vulnerable and being willing to speak on this earlier than was most comfortable for you. I think this is really something many of us deal with and need to hear. Thank you so much. You're lovely, and I appreciate you. 🖤
@corriemcclain7960
@corriemcclain7960 Ай бұрын
I think I've been trying to put this into words for months now. It's also really hard to look at something that kept you alive but now is hurting you and shift
@silverkiteflier
@silverkiteflier Ай бұрын
Literally pausing the video to write this. Been realizing within the past year I'm prob audhd, and recently had a horrible week where I was regressed most days and so, so angry at everything! I resonated so hard with what you just said about holding in your anger and not taking it out on others, but then you suffer silently. I feel I've done that my whole life and so when I was feeling that anger recently it was so loud and violent I didn't know how to deal with it other than scream as loud as I could into a pillow. It was a me who I haven't seen before, and it scared me. I feel like I've somehow lost a connection to my anger, as well as other aspects of my being (my body, my voice) due to masking my whole life. I'll be continuing my healing journey, and thank you for making your videos, they've really helped me learn about my own autism and mental health.
@thiccletics
@thiccletics 28 күн бұрын
I tell people all the time- anger is a human emotion. It’s ok to express it as long as you do not hurt someone else or yourself. That is when it is toxic. You’re allowed to be angry and you’re allowed to say it. ❤ it’s been a long road for me ❤
@wiegraf9009
@wiegraf9009 14 күн бұрын
If you live with someone who has huge triggers over anger expression this condition is never really cleared. Have to find other outlets.
@JonBrase
@JonBrase Ай бұрын
Stream of consciousness here: I've always been the least regulated person in my home environment, and extremely well regulated in public. I'm extremely good at not expressing anger to anyone present, but I cause my family a fair bit of stress with outbursts at objects, at politics, etc. I also swear like a sailor on the road. I was always the scrawny kid at school, so I almost never express anger other than vocally (I used to get into fisticuffs with my little brother, but eventually he got too good at defending himself). My parents were always very disciplined about physical discipline, any spankings with any kind of force were limited to a pre-announced number of blows and were done bare-handed (so limited in force by the pain tolerance of the parent involved), so we weren't taught to associate anger with impulsive violence.
@kellyschroeder7437
@kellyschroeder7437 Ай бұрын
It’s so so hard internalizing anger and all the emotions. I’ve messed up so much and hurt so many only now realizing stuff. Thank you for sharing 💞👊🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻
@ms.ggrose
@ms.ggrose 24 күн бұрын
i dont know what "woowoo stuff" is but spirituality and psychology are interconnected so i hope people can accept that so we can all come into higher awareness
@nuhvaa4280
@nuhvaa4280 Ай бұрын
I'm only two minutes in and I'd like to say that, no matter where this video goes, I am glad that you felt inclined to discuss this and follow your intuition- the way you described your abstract thoughts and difficulty with articulating them really resonated with me. I have that problem too, I need a LOT of rumination time to be able to explain something to someone, even if I understand to begin with... thanks for making me feel like I'm not alone! Thought I was just crazy... I am certainly not built like everyone else around me, neurologically speaking... I am working towards getting a diagnosis right now. But as a mid-20s woman the doctors don't really take me seriously, it's frustrating. Anyways thank you for your perspective.
@kermesashton8637
@kermesashton8637 Ай бұрын
anger and i have always had a complicated relationship. the part you brought up about not wanting to hurt others like you've been hurt has been my mantra for anger for years. add that to the fact i felt i couldn't express my anger lest it make my already abusive situation worse, and i'm stuck at this point where whenever i do get angry, i don't know what to do with it. i've taken it out on myself, but i could never stand the thought of taking it out on someone else. from what i've seen growing up, anger came with violent screaming and sometimes with actual violence. i never wanted to become that so i just... stopped. after working through my trauma in emdr, i'm still left with this not knowing of how to handle my anger now that i'm actually feeling it again. my boyfriend says that screaming can get your point across, but when i'm near anyone who is screaming or yelling i get really triggered and shut down. it scares me because i know it isn't good for me, that it's not healthy. but it just gets too hard to overcome that line i've firmly put in the sand that it feels as if i have no other choice. sorry if this reads weird
@consuelonavarrohidalgo5334
@consuelonavarrohidalgo5334 Ай бұрын
Be strong Irene. The first Saturn return is absolutely harsh but you can do it.
@tulipa_chan2271
@tulipa_chan2271 Ай бұрын
6 minutes into the video, and I HAVE to say this. The way you get emotional and your voice cracks when you talk about yourself, happens to me the same way. I blamed myself for feeling self-pity and victim- mentality when that happened. But really it's just the pain that I never allowed to be expressed. I find a sister-like image in you and I am eternally grateful for all your information and stories you share. 33 and still can't understand why I'm dysfunctional af, but you help. You help me see why. 🙏🙏🙏
@shion_lwn
@shion_lwn Ай бұрын
Im late diagnosed AuDHD. I went through the same as I grew up. I was never allowed to express my anger in front of my father. my father used to beat my older brothers up for the things they had done. My mother was not able to protect us. we just had to quietly observe his yelling and beating without saying a single word. I didn't realize now, through therapy, that I haven't been able to know how to express emotions, and when my emotions came out, it was extreme. Didnt know how to release them. Thank you for posting this video!!!
@TheCloverAffiliate12
@TheCloverAffiliate12 Ай бұрын
Oh, goodness, Irene...that's a lot to process and go through. About five years ago, I had a similar but different experience that unlocked something. On my way to deliver some food, I was feeling some _intense_ self-loathing over a missed social opportunity when suddenly...I switched positions. I was on the receiving end of the anger. I kept crying and had much difficulty stopping crying between the two deliveries I had. I was unfortunately no stranger to angry outbursts towards others when dysregulated (still happens at times, but I've seen so much progress in myself), and I could see how it ended up hurting them. I had no idea just how much damage I was doing to myself internalizing my anger...much less how much of my anger was internalized from the traumas I endured or caused. I'm so glad for you that you're growing and learning in this way. Grateful as always for what you've shared. EDIT: Rage rooms are also a thing! They're spaces you rent out to break things in with safety equipment on. I haven't been to one yet, but I really want to someday. EDIT #2: Okay so I clearly didn't watch far enough into the video before putting the first edit 😂
@BrentWigginsWords
@BrentWigginsWords Ай бұрын
My anger is a quiet disquietude. I mostly seethe in a silent anger. In some cases, my silence was the loudest scream. It would make some people change for the better. Other times, it was like expecting the other person to drink poison. People can make you mad because they are stubborn and stuck in their ways. Perfectionists and know-it-alls bother me, for example. There were many situations when I wanted to not repress my anger, but I stayed neutral or stoic. I thought it better to keep the peace, even when I wasn't at peace. I have rare moments when I speak my mind and exactly get to the point, making sure I'm understood and respected. I always remind myself that people like that are not worth the heart attack. Surround yourself with people, places, and things that don't remind you of or give you anger. Sometimes, you can't avoid people that make you angry. Remember, they don't dictate your day or happiness. You choose that for yourself. Do your best, come home, and move forward. Let them be right (even when they are wrong) and be happy. I don't always re-wild myself, but I keep my younger days of flailing, running, and being goofy close to my heart. I also avoid toxic positivity. Another way I express my anger is by turning it into something productive. My work speaks for itself and I'll never have to yell because of it.
@iwasntreadyforitall
@iwasntreadyforitall 12 күн бұрын
This video really helped put things into perspective for me. When I was angry/frustrated/grumpy as a kid my parents told me I was being a brat, and "nobody likes whiners". Or they'd kind of laugh and poke fun at me, like it was silly because I didn't really have anything to be upset about. My whole life I've thought in the back of my head I must be a bad person because I was such a difficult, sensitive, self-centered kid, whereas my older siblings were so polite and quiet at that age. Now it's clearer for me to see that I wasn't bad, I was just a kid struggling to regulate (especially with sensory issues) and my parents didn't understand how to help me. My siblings were simply able to repress more than I could, which damaged them too. And tbh, I'm really fucking angry at my parents. Part of me hates them, even. Which is hard to admit because I'm still stuck in the old survival mechanism of suppressing my anger and trying to please and defend them so that maybe I'll be safe. It feels good to come full circle and welcome that anger, and begin to let go of this shame around it. As an adult, I can finally create the safety for myself that I was always looking for as a kid.
@Bravobravogrl
@Bravobravogrl 25 күн бұрын
Don’t know why, but your vid titles are the only titles that always draw me in Irene 🎉
@thethoughtspot222
@thethoughtspot222 25 күн бұрын
That’s so ironic cause I sit there thinking on these dang titles for so long 😵‍💫
@livingandhealingwithmcs
@livingandhealingwithmcs Ай бұрын
I was raised in tourismus and started working @ 14 running Bar & Service... It was horror, no Privacy and everyone needs to keep a perfect facade. The happy Christian family... I ran away @ 16 after one unnoticed suicide attempt. My parents are both neurodiverse and we kids just had to patch so much. Now I understand why and how + how I ended up with yet another AUDHD man in my life but I also still feel that Anger and sadness...expecially as the abuse only stopps when you make them. Screaming since 1 year and finally beeing heard. It made me so ill physically beeing everyones therapist 😢Thank you for sharing so open 🙏
@darkstarr984
@darkstarr984 13 күн бұрын
I feel so so much better with allowing myself to really feel anger, and to acknowledge reasons why I am angry instead of trying to talk myself out of it like I always had. Because I have a lot of anger, and all of it has been so deeply pushed down and repressed for my whole life. Almost 28 years and the past few months I not only let myself express it but I genuinely feel and absolutely understand where it comes from. I was always doing that somatic release of tensing and baring my teeth… and I was constantly, constantly shamed for it. I refuse to let people tell me not to do that anymore.
@Minakie
@Minakie Ай бұрын
I am genuinely so happy that you had this breakthrough, Irene. I remember watching some of your old videos, when you were stating your opinion on anger and how useless it was and feeling sad for you, because one of the first things I learned when I started practicing mindfulness was that all emotions (good or bad) are valid and serve a purpose and that you can't suppress one of them without also numbing down the others. I ended up with extreme alexithymia due to repressing several emotions but, because I have aphantasia and a memory disorder, I can't process things in the same way as you do. I learned to allow myself to cry when I feel like I need to cry and I've slowly been working to be able to name what emotion I'm feeling, but I'm not able to trace my traumas back to their origin, so it's harder for me to process and heal. But it seemed to really have clicked for you and I'm crossing my fingers that this will have a positive impact and that you can live a more fulfilling life moving forward. We both carry a lot of childhood trauma and you deserve better. Thank you for sharing.
@lunabernhardt7680
@lunabernhardt7680 Ай бұрын
I’m doing a project for my last year of design university, and I recently found out I’m likely audhd, and I’m likely alexithymic. I want my project to be a resource for autistic people with Alexithymia to express themselves other than verbally, but rather, visually. Communication doesn’t have to be verbal. This video came up at a very good time. I also grew up with a highly highly reactive and angry and passive aggressive and blaming mother. My household was so chaotic and disorganised and completely disregarding proper expression of emotion other than the manifestation of anger. My parents always invalidated my feelings, or ignored me, or yelled at me. This caused me to have immense hypervigellence, avoidance, numbness, anxiety, and suppression of emotions. I thought I had to have a tough skin to go through life, with the added difficulties of being audhd. This shit ruined my perception of myself and my connection with others. I want people to be able to express themselves freely. I’m in a relationship now and it’s so hard to allow myself to be angry because they are very sensitive as well, and I never ever want them to feel bad. I also feel the need to be calm and be a mediator and compensate. I downplay my own experience for the benefit of others. I hate how I get so overwhelmed when I’m stressed that I literally either break down or I go numb, amd I can never identify how I feel because I alway suppressed my emotions and people pleased. When I was younger I was a lot more expressive of my anger, but it was not good for me or others. I have control over it now, but I’m trying to do it in a more healthy way rather than repressing it. I’m learning to be more honest and get other people to understand how I feel when I’m triggered (which happens a lot). This video was very relatable, thank you for your content.
@beethers
@beethers 27 күн бұрын
I like to look at people's faces when they talk but they can't look at me too much because eye contact makes me uncomfortable. I appreciate how much you look away from the camera
@marissa2649
@marissa2649 Ай бұрын
I think about this a lot. I feel like in autism, our anger is never valid. Whereas NT people's anger are valid, and it's even encouraged for them. This in itself makes me angry.
@TheCakeIsALie422
@TheCakeIsALie422 Ай бұрын
Also, just starting to watch the video now. Your description of downloads made my jaw drop. That’s exactly how it feels when I’m trying to figure out how to verbalize a complicated thought. It’s like a collection of visuals, memories, and resonances between them that’s almost impossible to articulate unless somebody is sitting with me, letting me work through it verbally for a while.
@clarajoao3359
@clarajoao3359 Ай бұрын
it's crazy how relatable this new video is. I also realised recently I've been repressing my anger, espcially due to how I was raised and how I had to be the one basically taking care of everyone's needs and emotions, but I'm still not sure how to actually allow myself to feel anger especially because I'm afraid that will escalate situations just by allowing myself to feel such. The odd part for me, is that there's been a couple times when I got told I was too angryl on the few moments I couldn't take it anymore and tried to demand people to respect my boundaries or tell them they need to respect me. However I think this is comom for those who were parentified because people are so used to us being submissive and allowing things most wouldn't that when we tell people that it's not ok and show disaproval they get incredible upset and frustrated with us. I think this might be because people are used to release their frustrations and anger on us because they know we allow a lot and there won't be consequences. Basically people didn't allow us to feel anger when we were growing up and we ended up not allowing us to do such.
@acemarvel1564
@acemarvel1564 Ай бұрын
Well now that its being mentioned I suppose i have harbored trust issues with others of my generation. I get that where all not the same but i normally catch myself being extra skeptical and anxious around other "Zoomers" in fear of being ridiculed rejected or betrayed
@Ahhhhht
@Ahhhhht Ай бұрын
I’ve never related to another person’s experiences as much as I relate to yours. This is my biggest challenge in life as well. I’m a trans woman who went undiagnosed as AuDHD until 30 years old when I was *unofficially* diagnosed by my therapist who is herself diagnosed and focuses on social work for neurodivergent people. The combination of masking my emotions and natural self-expression both as an autistic person and a feminine person was extremely damaging in a way that will take me years to heal. I’m a year and a half into this process and it’s changing everything. I finally understand. And I continue to grow in understanding of what it all is and what it all means.
@antoinettefuller5519
@antoinettefuller5519 Ай бұрын
Whenever I get to the point of screaming and crying my head is always empty and quiet. It's peaceful and calm in my head but on the outside I'm a hurricane of emotions like everything that I was holding on to are released in the moment.
@alyssalitwiller7885
@alyssalitwiller7885 Ай бұрын
This. Is incredibly helpful!! I didn't even realize I've done this before. I also had a similar mentality taught to me growing up. As the oldest, I always felt like I should've stood up for my siblings more. But it was a similar situation of "you don't get involved unless you want the punishment too". I'm gonna try and implement this more!
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