I used to think I wore my emotions pretty openly and that people just didn’t give a shit until I was diagnosed with autism. Feeling like you’re expressing something you actually aren’t is apparently one of the symptoms. In my mind, my face is making the most cartoonist exaggerations of emotion, but since nobody ever says anything I have to assume I actually have a poker face on. :/
I have horrible social anxiety and (undiagnosed) agoraphobia. I’ve been told by many people that I have a perpetual RBF, and it makes me intimidating to approach. I just don’t like starting conversation, but I love having conversation with the right person. However me separating myself from people as much as I can makes human interaction difficult
I have the opposite problem. Even when I think I’m doing a good job hiding my emotions I’m later told that everyone was very well aware of how I was feeling.
Though I have severe RBF so that could be why 🤷♂️
I dont have mental disorders. Im just a piece of shit :D
want to go do some bowling with me?
Hey, cousin!
Join us for the next episode, when Chris buttsexes anon.
> I go do butsexxes
> happyThanks Chris
One time I came back from my lunchtime car scream looking particularly haggard and my boss offered me whisky from his desk. I don’t work there anymore.
Sorry I may not understand or don’t have the full context but is it so bad your boss offered you a drink with him?
Like some sort of bonding right ?
The gesture itself was nice, but the fact that he kept hard liquor in his desk to soothe employees at their breaking point was one symptom of the horrible culture at the company.
I think you misunderstood why an alcoholic keeps alcohol near their person.
They worked for diddy.
Ain’t no office party like a p-diddy office party.
Fuck it man! Let’s go bowling…
Fuck it! We
ballbowl!
We could all use a Chris in our lives every now and then
The very rare fake OR gay greentext has blessed you with a visit. Cross-post one billion times or risk having a mild inconvenience over the next month.
Moral of the story: be like Chris