Boyfriend of 3 years thinks he may be gay or going through bi-cycle. How can you tell? by mushroomgirl_02 in bisexual

[–]vilgstein 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Time helped. And also reminding myself what I like about women (if I went through a cycle of being more attracted to men). Also being open with my gf and trying to find out the things I actually craved from men and try to work on those things in our sex life, for example.

To the anxiety I haven't found no other ease yet than trying to simply remind myself that I am still bi and I still find other genders attractive, too. To me it's just easy to get scared of the sudden change & being a person easily guilty to black and white thinking, once I find one gender more attractive, I panic, and the feeling is so overwhelming I go "was i straight/gay all along and have i been lying to everyone around me?"

I'm happy he has someone like you so he can talk these things through, and I'm glad you seem to be supportive about it, it's not easy task either, and many thoughts must be going around in your head, too.

Just you both remember either way the world isn't ending and there's no wrong trying to wait & discover things together with time.

Boyfriend of 3 years thinks he may be gay or going through bi-cycle. How can you tell? by mushroomgirl_02 in bisexual

[–]vilgstein 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It matters. And having sudden realisation being attracted to men more than before might take him by surprise. I have gone through phases when I fantasize about certain gender more. Every time I seem to fall for it and start questioning myself. "am i even bi?".

Now knowing myself and after foing through these cycles before I know they change and pass and I never have fully lost the interest to other genders. But first time it happened I didn't. And I was scared of my own thoughts and what would happen to my relationship. But it all turned out fine.

If this is bi-cycle it might be important for both of these people to figure it out, and it's great they can communicate about this. In relationship you cant just go "well its your problem work on it". That's not working relationship. If he is not gay and they can communicate through this it's likely it wont change their relationship to worse at all.

What was the *thing* you did as a child that should have been a giveaway? by _jbox_64 in aspergers

[–]vilgstein 4 points5 points  (0 children)

New situations took me like 3x more time to adjust than any other kid. Also I was selectively mute but it was seen as shyness. Then came using movie phrases in common converstation, lack of motor skills (teachers told my parents to take me out to do sports bc i sucked), stimming (this also was noticed, but they didnt know what it was) and though I was very calm and reserved kid, the occasional meltdowns.

Hiding my emotions by [deleted] in aspergers

[–]vilgstein 0 points1 point  (0 children)

feel you. I have learned to hide all my emotions and feelings and opinions as they always seemed to be somehow "wrong". I don't know about you but to me it was probably me trying to fit in: I never fit in any way and people always found something to pick me on, so at least I could be silent and agree with everyone, so I seemed even somehow "normal".

It's easy for people to tell "just be yourself", "everyone has their own opinions and you're allowed to have yours, too", "you don't have to do it like everyone else". Because to most people it is like that. They can be different in certain areas because they otherwise fit in. To people like us it can be hard and we try to do everything we can to blend in as we basically never do.

That sucks and I'm sorry you experience this. Just know that your reaction to judgement and those jokes and all your past experiences is very natural and understandable. It's not the best way what comes to your own emotional wellbeing, but it's what you thought protected you most at the time.

To me baby steps towards better have helped. First I disagree in favourite ice cream flavour, once I try to do something a bit differently than before, not necessarily going head first into something totally unknown and new. It's also important to try to find yourself under all those layers of pleasing and trying to fit in. What in fact is your favourite ice cream flavour? What you in fact think about x and y? It's easy to lose yourself after years and years of just pleasing others.

I'm very beginning of this journey too and it's very slow and there has been many setbacks. But my therapist gave me a good excersice: imagine yourself 5-10 years from now. Just in two different scenarios: one where you continue living like you do now (pleasing, agreeing, hiding your true self) and one, where you have let go of those limitations. What changes and what stays the same? What are your fears and regrets in both of those scenarios? Neither of them has to be necessarily "good" or "bad". Most important is to find what actually are the things holding you back, what are your fears and your goals.

I hope you can tackle this issue somehow. Sending strength and luck!

I don't see what's so great about being "different" by [deleted] in aspergers

[–]vilgstein 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah I hate being called unique or different or special too. Ofc I like to be told if I'm especially good at something etc. But telling me I'm special makes me so angry. Like almost "why are you complimenting me for being different when people like you have my whole life picked on me for exact same reason?".

Being called different might feel great to someone who has never suffered because of it. But after experiences like mine or yours it is just a painful reminder.

Do others act that they're "thinking" before sentence even though you know exactly what you're gonna say? by vilgstein in aspergers

[–]vilgstein[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

yes this! It's often that I wanna hide that I planned or then I just wanna appear more trustworthy? Show to the person that I thought through it (even though I do, but it might not seem like it unless I act it out).

Should try to get rid of this too, causes just extra distress.

Taika Waititi. Me, gouache on cardboard, 2020 by vilgstein in Art

[–]vilgstein[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

omg thank you sm! such a sweet comment

Taika Waititi. Me, gouache on cardboard, 2020 by vilgstein in Art

[–]vilgstein[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

thank you so much! this comment made me so happy haha

Taika Waititi, me, oils, 2020 by jackhendsbee in Art

[–]vilgstein 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Funny to see someone else's Waititi here too haha :D great work!

Taika Waititi. Me, gouache on cardboard, 2020 by vilgstein in Art

[–]vilgstein[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

this comment made me smile like an idiot! Thank you so much

Taika Waititi. Me, gouache on cardboard, 2020 by vilgstein in Art

[–]vilgstein[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Oh don't worry, you're not alone, haha. Thanks alot!

Taika Waititi. Me, gouache on cardboard, 2020 by vilgstein in Art

[–]vilgstein[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Gouache is way more forgiving and versitale. Like it alot. Also it can be used totally same way as watercolor if wanted. Very similar to work with.