by davidbanner99@ » Sun Jul 25, 2021 10:05 pm
In the case of autism, emotions tend to be stored up as internal energy but not discharged through communication. For me it's easy to analyse emotional communication as I noticed one day how (with actors)face muscles and eyes reflect various emotions.
The problem for me is I have emotions but they don't "modulate". They don't resonate. They don't exist in the sense of collective communication. However, the feelings of anger, joy or sorrow remain part of my psyche and emotions tend to over-ride intellect during periods of meltdown. The only emotion I virtually lack altogether is fear. This has been tested by noting in autism the pupils don't dilate under threat.
To the point, I feel possibly the only way to help myself at this time is to try and function with as little emotion as possible. Given my emotions are pretty useless as a communicative mechanism, the overall effect is emotions store up within and bottle up. Kretschmer, in fact, noted this "affective curve" which differs from the steady up and down phase.
When emotions bottle up they create overloads and, according to E Bleuler, delusions and even paranoia. This, in my view, may explain why delusion is now so widespread in society - due to effects of social media stifling social interaction in real life.
The only person who trained to reduce emotion I know of was Nikola Tesla. In this case he only partly succeeded. Ultimately, for me, emotion is a troublesome aspect of the psyche that isn't productive outside of social interaction. However, to date, only intellect helped me solve problems.