The Queen has been on the throne for 60 years. Yay The Queen.
In Britain, despite the fact that we spend roughly 98% of our time being completely oblivious to the continued existence of the royal family (apart from those few members who regularly appear in OK Magazine and have subsequently developed obnoxious and probably quite disrespectful nicknames), it is actually the law that anything vaguely celebration-worthy that involves said group of royals must be celebrated with a Street Party, with non-participants being taken to the Tower of London to be pecked to death by ravens.
As such, there was a Street Party today on our street. I was coming back from my evening of board game and curry depravity and I had work to do, so I really wasn’t feeling it anyway, but then my social anxiety kicked in and I was reminded of why I hate this sort of thing quite so much.
I loathe, despise and detest enforced merriment — the feeling that you “should” be somewhere and that you “should” be having more fun than you actually are. Enforcement could be unspoken (a simple feeling that you “should show your face”) or explicit (someone outright saying “oh come on, come and see these people!” in such a way that to say “well, no actually, the very prospect fills me with a crippling sense of outright panic” would make you look like A Right Bastard rather than someone suffering from an actual problem). The effects are the same though — a feeling of dread, the thought “I don’t want to do this” rattling around your head and, while the socialisation is actually going on, a constant and intense desire to find an excuse to leave or, in extreme cases, to simply bolt as quickly as possible.
The reason I don’t want to be in that situation is generally nothing personal to the people I’m supposed to be socialising with — our neighbours seem like a perfectly nice little family, for example — but it is simply part of the whole social phobia. I feel pressured to put myself in that situation, and then once I’m in there, there isn’t an easy escape route to get out of it, which makes me panic.
I think the main problem I have with occasions like this is the fact that they centre around small talk, which is something I can’t do very well. I tend to think about things a lot before I say them — to a fault, sometimes — and small talk just doesn’t work if you’re contemplating and considering every single thing that you say. “Should I mention the weather?” I think. “Or does that make me sound like the most clichéd twat ever? Should I crack a joke? What if it falls flat? That’s the worst feeling in the world. Everyone’s looking at me. Say something.”
Oddly enough if I’m in a professional situation where I have a reason to be interacting with strangers, I’m absolutely fine. If I’m running an event, or meeting and greeting customers, or standing up on stage and presenting to lots of people, I have no problem whatsoever in talking, making jokes, being charismatic and charming the pants off people. (Not literally. To my knowledge, anyway.) But take away that sense of context and purpose and I’m fucked. I feel panicked, and all I really want to do is run away and do something — anything — rather than talk to these people I feel I have nothing in common with. I build up resentment, and then I feel guilty about resenting these people for simply being more social than I am, and the whole vicious cycle goes around and around and around until I find some convenient excuse to extract myself and leave, never to return. (Today, I had work to do, so I was able to go and hide for a bit while I did that.)
This particular aspect of social phobia/social anxiety/shyness/whatever you want to call it is why I never really got on with the concept of “going out” for the sake of going out, or going “on the pull”, or indeed in speaking to anyone I didn’t already know somehow. I count the few occasions that I have successfully managed to initiate and carry on a non-essential or non-professional conversation with a stranger as huge personal victories — justifiably so, in some cases, as some have led to long-term friendships, such as my utterly nerve-wracking first words to my now-friend Cat while trapped in a lift (well, not “trapped” as such… we were both riding it, and it was in full working order) with her on my first day of a pre-term music course at university.
I won’t lie, this particular phobia is a real pain to deal with at times, and I really wish I could be free of it. That won’t happen without hard work over a long period, however, and I’m sometimes not sure I’m ready to confront this particular problem head on.
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