{"id":12635,"date":"2017-11-15T23:24:36","date_gmt":"2017-11-16T07:24:36","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/godammit.com\/?p=12635"},"modified":"2017-11-16T12:47:15","modified_gmt":"2017-11-16T20:47:15","slug":"whats-wrong-with-me-volume-500","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/godammit.com\/whats-wrong-with-me-volume-500\/","title":{"rendered":"What’s Wrong With Me, Volume 500"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"what's<\/a><\/p>\n

All my life, I’ve wondered what the fuck is wrong with me. I’m curious and reflective by nature, and relentless about trying to figure shit out.<\/p>\n

I find it amazing that other people aren’t consumed by questions about their own psyche but I accept that most people are focused on other matters. Good for them.<\/p>\n

Me, I know I’m fucked up. Chronically depressed is one way for me to understand why I’m always sad, tired, hopeless, and easily annoyed. But it isn’t enough. There is also a complete lack of will to do anything useful.<\/p>\n

As a teenager, I was thrilled to discover the term neurasthenic<\/a>. What a romantic-sounding Victorian condition<\/a>, and one that seemed to cover all my bases. I could think of myself lying on a velvet fainting couch, one pale arm dangling listlessly toward the floor. Neurotic doesn’t sound as appealing. That goes double for Fibromyalgia.<\/p>\n

So imagine my excitement at discovering a WHOLE NEW DIAGNOSIS that doesn’t even exist yet in the US. Ready? It’s called PDA, or Pathological Demand Avoidance. It’s considered “a behaviour profile within the autism spectrum.”<\/p>\n

Those who present with this particular diagnostic profile are driven to avoid everyday demands and expectations to an extreme extent. This demand avoidant behaviour is rooted in an anxiety-based need to be in control.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n

Well, I wouldn’t have thought of myself as autistic, but the description feels so right, so resonant, so me<\/em>:<\/p>\n