Ah it's the opposite with me, Hops, lost in translation due to me trying to keep things brief - when I say angst and worries it's not feelings being discussed, it's a long list of 'he did this and then he didn't do that and then he should have done that but then he didn't do this', all of which is accompanied by lots of extra detail of where, when, why, background etc - and all of it manageable by saying or doing something fairly simple. To give one example (and this is from a long time ago), a friend - who was a good friend, I cared for her a lot and enjoyed her company and she was good to me many times - spent a considerable length of time going through every detail of what had been an all weekend long argument over a scratch on the family car which she was certain was the fault of the husband. How she knew that when they both drove it regularly I don't know, but this whole passive aggressive argument started because of it, went on for three days, all around the kids, and here she was making my ears bleed with a minute by minute account of this endless and pointless saga. If I had a car, and a partner, and there was a scratch on the car, I would either fix the scratch myself, or ask him to do it. It's probably no more than a ten minute job, it's no different to polishing a table so it's not difficult to do, but when I asked her why she didn't just say "there's a scratch on the back of the car, can you fix it over the weekend" she looked at me like I had two heads. She just couldn't comprehend it and that's what I've had a lot of over the years - a need for endless drama (instead of just dealing with the situation - talk about how it makes you feel, of course, but why not look for a solution? I don't get that). Or a similar focus on irrelevant, unnecessary detail while huge obstacles remain unchecked - ie the friend with the holiday talk, who has an hour and a half free to give a blow by blow account of their trip but doesn't have time to go to the doctor and get the long list of health problems she has checked and dealt with, even though she's getting to the point of being disabled because things are getting so bad now.
I guess what it really highlighted for me (when we were away) was how nice it was to have uncomplicated conversations about where people were from and where they were going and how much they were enjoying it and so on. Uplifting verses draining, I guess.
I think there's a bit of a misconception that autistic people don't deal with feelings. I've never met an autistic person like that, in fact most I know are incredibly sensitive souls and worry enormously about other people and feel very deeply. I think it more likely that other people's feelings - in large amounts and in situations that can't be avoided - are very draining to listen to, particularly if it is just an emotional dump, rather than a quest for a solution. You need facts to problem solve. I think some people thrive on other people's feelings in a vampirific sort of way - it's fuel for the next bout of coffee morning gossip, or it makes people feel important to be trusted with the information. I've no issue with someone talking about their feelings, if it's proportionate to the situation (ie someone grieving will have a huge amount to get off their chest, someone still wanging on about feeling hard done by that someone else got the job seven years after it happened needs to take action to deal with that and move on). I think it's the perpetual helplessness that bugs me and I seem to have attracted a lot of that over the years. Although equally it's helped me work through a lot of my own stuff so I probably shouldn't be so dismissive of it xx