I struggle to do things in silence. Earlier today, I was unable to cook for almost thirty minutes because I couldn’t find something to listen to. Like I didn’t start until I could find something to settle on.

Before starting something, I usually try to check in with someone or I’ll start up a chat. I don’t have the bandwidth to long.

Other times I’ll have my laptop with a document on one side of the screen with a movie on the other. With a switch nearby, my phone in my hand, and I’m trying to eat a meal.

I have these rich fantasy worlds I’ll daydream in. Like legit world building where I need things to make sense.

It feels like I’m distracting myself from my life sometimes. I’m not in a great place, and I know I’d start tasks when I’m stressed. Sometimes I’ll drop make plans and then drop them immediately. Other times I’ll freeze and stall before making a decision.

On one hand, I think this is a form of dissociation, given my trauma history. I’m just disengaged and I don’t feel motivated to take action.

I also think it might be autism. I’ll let myself get lost in rabbit holes that interest me and I’m very particular.

I also don’t know if this is adhd. The multitasking and keeping busy feel in line. I struggled to pay attention in school, but I don’t know if that was stress or something else.

I feel a lot of shame around this and wonder if these are traits of narcissism. I’m absent minded with being on time for other people, and I feel like using people distract myself is wrong.

I’m asking this because I want to properly identify how my actions may be read so that I can communicate better. Any literature, feedback, or advice is welcome.

  • NephewAlphaBravo [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    6 days ago

    So for me it’s getting started that’s the hard part, if I can get over that hump then that job or whatever has now become The Thing I’m Doing and it’s easier to keep going than it is to start doing something else. Like, wherever it makes sense to do so, I try to append things to an existing routine so that it becomes a habitual “oh that’s just the thing that comes next” and I can autopilot 5-10 minutes deep. Basically figuring out ways to avoid thinking too hard about what I have to do next, because thinking about what I have to do next is when the procrastination happens.