I’m learning that being told “you’re too sensitive” and other such remarks is considered gaslighting. However, as autistic individuals, we are known for being highly sensitive, both with perceptions and emotions. So, I find myself wondering if perhaps I need to consider that I am more sensitive than the general population and accommodate what I see as their insensitivity, dismissiveness, and blame-shifting.

How do you handle being told “you’re too sensitive”?

What do you think would be a healthy response?

  • PleasantAura@lemmy.one
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    1 year ago

    I mean, be conscious of your needs, but anyone saying “you’re too sensitive” is pretty much universally an unhealthy person to be around unless there’s some real nuance to the situation. It means they’re dismissing your emotional reactions as unreasonable or otherwise not worth respecting and that’s basically abuse 101.

    Find people who get you and accept you as you are. If there’s something about yourself that you struggle with, work on coping techniques and the like, but ultimately anyone who doesn’t respect you is going to abuse or hurt you even if it’s unintentional on their part. It’s why we’re several times more likely to be abused than neurotypical people: we’re constantly told that we’re being unreasonable and we tend to be far more accepting of others than they are of us, often ignoring abuse because we’re taught to internalize self-hatred from a young age. At least that’s my perspective as an autistic person with C-PTSD and a heck of a lot of trauma related to this sort of thing exactly.

    The correct response to someone seeming sensitive or expressing a boundary is acceptance and respect, possibly followed by discussion on those terms when it’s not urgently in need of addressing. Ignoring boundaries is almost always either abusive or neglectful. Slips are going to happen, of course, but “you’re too sensitive” is an intentional attempt to dismiss your boundaries, not a slip barring exceptional circumstance.

  • Raffster@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    There is no healthy response to gaslighting is what I have found, intentional or not. People will not change their perspective for you. Walk away.

    • Streetdog@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      “Walk away.”

      While I have to agree 100% with what you say, because I have lived with that same motto for the last 40 years, it maybe ain’t really a solution in the end.

      You’ll lose everyone (NT) you know because they are, at some point, all like this. So you’ll end up alone running away from yourself. Then go crazy, unless you can provide for yourself.

      I’ve abandoned most of my relations, personal and professional, for gaslighting me. I walked away so far I (literally) ended up on the other side of the planet. They still gaslighting me.

      I don’t have any advice, just a warning.

      Interesting to see all the response here as I can relate to them so much.

      • Raffster@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I am pretty far gone on that journey, have always known the consequences. Had to leave a marriage because of this, will not ever work a big job again (despite having multiple higher degrees) and willingly so. Will walk away from everything eventually. All because the alternative sucks so horribly that I prefer it this way.

        • Streetdog@sh.itjust.works
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          1 year ago

          Absolutely. Not having a something is (almost always) better than having “problems” with that something, incl. people.

          I didn’t know about my autism till recently, 40 years of age. Was “misdiagnosed” in the 90s, or my mom just didn’t want to hear the diagnose when I was younger with the hope I’d turn out okay, despite my very clear struggling at school/work for 28 years, which was when and why I moved country, where I now similarly struggle.

          So I do realize that cutting people off as easily as we want is just a symptom of ours. Even when angry, others (NT) will soon get over it, even if we (ND) still hold an extreme grudge. Even though it also feels extremely good to get rid of them, it’s not a cure for this world, or our world.

          I’m just trying to say it might be really hard for some people to cut others off, like I sure have done, and still have some “community” or support around them. To become self-sufficient, before turning to negative thoughts so to say. It sucks, and I know there is little help. Just tossing some virtual coins into the fountain here, wishing some youngster might get a better life than mine knowing what they’re about to go up to. Despite all the gaslighting going on.

  • Deestan@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I try to keep in mind that everyone around me isn’t acting with perfect and constant skill or patience in their interactions, and have their own issues and anxieties big or small.

    By that I mean “you are too sensitive” tends to come from someone being frustrated that they don’t know how to behave towards/around you. Often it helps a lot to forgive them the initial mistake of blaming you, assume their position for a bit, and approach them for a conversation starting with “yes, I am sensitive but it’s not something I can turn off”.

  • Treczoks@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    “I am not ‘sensitive’, I just take you by your word. If you don’t mean what you say, maybe better start thinking before you open your mouth.”

  • cogitoprinciple@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Wait, that’s gaslighting? Crap. I didn’t know this. I certainly don’t like being told that. I’ve had to put up with this a lot. I don’t have an answer, but you have given me some valuable insight, nonetheless. Thank you

  • calypsopub@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My response would be, “You could be right.” Then I’d go about my life. I just let criticism roll off me like water off a duck’s back unless I think it’s valid. It’s hilarious to watch how frustrated they get when you’re unapologetically yourself.

  • elbowdrop@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    People who say that dont realize that we take everything seriously/personally. So a harmful comment hits harder more often. This is why i detest working in a team enviroment.

  • CaptObvious@literature.cafe
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    1 year ago

    At a younger age, I would just get confused and frustrated with no good way to address such issues. I never considered it gaslighting, though. They were being honest.

    Today, I don’t bother. If someone tells me I’m too sensitive, I acknowledge that, from their perspective, I probably am. Then I disengage, get away as soon as possible, and avoid contact for a while. “A while” has sometimes meant “years.”

    • stolid_agnostic@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      They weren’t being honest. They were being intolerant. You’ve internalized it somewhat, and I’m sorry for that.

      • CaptObvious@literature.cafe
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        1 year ago

        I appreciate the empathy, but I disagree. They were being honest from their perspective. I can respect that.

        There’ve been a few people over the years who tried to gaslight me. Tried. One advantage of my age and particular expression of autism is that I genuinely don’t care what most people think.

  • Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    I don’t have an answer, but I have family that will say insulting shit as if it’s nothing, then get mad at me if I react in anyway.

    Like my mom drinking on the weekend, and telling me I don’t know what love is and should just go ahead and get a girlfriend already.

    … I’ve been in love, and I’m super gay. And if the child doesn’t know what love is, I feel like that’s the parent’s fault, isn’t it?

    But no, I can’t say anything without it turning into an argument and them complaining about how I take things too literally and “read too much into things”.

    But then if they ask me a question and I don’t hear them, their immediate assumption is that I did hear them, I understood their question, I’m able to answer immediately, I’m intentionally ignoring them, and my goal is to be disrespectful. So they immediately start ranting about how disrespectful I am, instead of just asking if I heard the question.

    And then they wonder why I don’t like talking to them.

  • r3df0x ✡️✝☪️@7.62x54r.ru
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    1 year ago

    Find people to talk to about it and try to figure out if the problem is really you or if it’s them and they’re trying to put you down for it.

    Getting really defensive will make people feel like they’re right.

  • turbodrooler@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I wish I knew the answer. It seems that the other responses suggest cutting these people out of your life, but in my case it’s my wife and coworkers. Cutting them out isn’t really an option.

  • Perroboc@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Not autistic, but I’m an uncle of an autistic 5 y/o kid, and I constantly ask his parents what’s the best way to act and react around him, and I’m just glad I do that as that gets me closer to my nephew 🙂

    I think you should be telling people what the autistic spectrum is, and that of course you will be too sensitive! Not everyone knows what it means, that it’s a spectrum.

  • gandalf_der_12te@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    First of all, you’re not “too sensitive”. There is no such thing. You are just being yourself.

    About how to deal with your parents/environment. I know it can be difficult (having made these experiences myself), especially if the other person is close to you and you are supposed to be able to trust them. However, let that criticism roll of, just like water that doesn’t stick on a duck’s back. Try to stay calm and clear in these situations and try to navigate yourself out of these situations.

  • avalokitesha@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    I usually tell people that I’m not too sensitive, but simply more sensitive than others like themselves, and that they just don’t want to be considerate because it inconveniences them.

    Lots of people get super flustered when that gets stated calmly and without much emotion. The key is not to yell or get emotionally, but to state it very calmly.

    That way, they can’t retort with personal attacks and actually have to address what I said. Usually they point out that others are not as sensitive, or that the world doesnt revolve around me. My reply in those cases depends on the situation. It could be something like “That’s true, but I’m not other people, and this noise bothers me. Why is it so important to you to keep making it?”

    If it is a family member, I try to point out that this is my home and I would like to be comfortable there, and I would try to figure out how to find a compromise.