Readers of longstanding might remember a post I made some
years ago in which I jokingly tried to invent some psychological condition
which I could have printed up to wear as a badge. Well, it seems I needn’t have
bothered because I think I’ve now discovered a real one.
It’s called PDA, which stands for Pathological Demand Avoidance. I don’t claim to understand the
symptoms in great depth, but they appear to run along the lines of:
A fear or hatred of being required by a second party to do
something, no matter what that something might be.
In serious cases, I’m reliably informed, it can be highly
debilitating and cause high levels of anxiety. And it’s included in the
catalogue of conditions associated with autism.
I’ve been experiencing this all my life, you know. Most
recently it’s manifested in appointment letters from the hospital. Your next appointment is on Friday 13th
of June at 11.30. I wilt almost visibly when I get one of those. I groan
and start to consider whether I can think of a credible reason to refuse, even
though the nature of the procedure or interview or whatever it might be is not
at all taxing. And they’re doing it for my benefit. And it’s free. So what am I
complaining about? The fact that I didn’t decide to go somewhere at a certain time,
date, and place myself, that’s what. They were given to me by somebody else, and
amounted therefore – in my mind at least – to a demand. I can’t tolerate
demands, even small, innocent, or helpful ones. The foot goes down and the cry
goes up: No!
That was how I felt for the whole of my school years and the
jobs I did for employers. It’s one of the reasons why freelance photography was
so amenable to me. For as much as my working trips were controlled to some
extent by nature and the weather, I was still free to chose the date, time, and
place in between the natural strictures.
And maybe this explains why my daughter has the same
difficulties, as did Emily Brontë. I regard that as quite an exclusive little
club.
(Add this to being an HSP, a sigma male, and an INFJ, and I
really do wonder why I bother to stay here. To learn things, I suppose.)