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09.08.2017 by SectionEight
If you can't feel anything and can't relate to others emotionally, why would it upset you that you're different? I scored 152 on the questionnaire but my lack of emotions and connections to others isn't distressing to me, it's merely a fact which is neither good nor bad (like the sky is blue, but not green).
I suspect you might believe you're missing out and that may have caused you distress. Personally there are pros and cons to everything. Focus on the pros of alexithymia and accept that you're different, but that doesn't means its wrong or bad.
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13.08.2017 by ImAlwaysSayingIDK
I can feel things. If you got so high on the test I'd think you'd know that alexithymia isn't about not feeling. It's not knowing what you're feeling. And I don't care about being different or "missing out". Alexithymia is a blessing and a curse. But it's not "missing out" that upset me
Not necessarily
22.08.2017 by CV
If you got so high on the test I'd think you'd know that alexithymia isn't about not feeling.
There are different experiences of it. Some alexithymics just have difficulty explaining or verbalizing the emotions they do feel, but for others, it is about not feeling certain emotions at all. Usually, some basic ones that "everyone" shares - such as love, hate, attachment, etc. The other common variance is only feeling the extremes of emotion, like anger or fear, but nothing else.
I know for me there is a distinct lack of feeling certain emotions. Especially the "connection" emotions like empathy. Just not there. At all. As in the original question, were someone to ask if I cared about them for example - if they meant emotionally, then no. Because as far as I'm aware, I can't. Do I have a vested opinion in the ethical position of their continued wellbeing as a sentient being on this planet? Absolutely.
I wonder about it at times, the proverbial "what if" and whether it can be altered and what would be different if I did, but being faced with being alexithymic wouldn't incite any kind of extreme response.
Test this
25.10.2017 by KeiganN
There is a significant difference between feeling emotions and being able to recognize or describe emotions.
I would or do well on a test asking to identify or describe emotions. I do feel the primary ones like happiness and sadness and frustration, lots of indifference. Though I certainly do care, it shows in my actions.