Unmasking workbook for adults coming out
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ASPartOfMe
Veteran
Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 36,113
Location: Long Island, New York
Living an Authentic Autistic Life Can Be Wonderful
Quote:
I am one of these late-diagnosed women, and every day, I marvel at how no one noticed I was autistic until I was 40. As a child, I avoided other children and preferred playing alone. I was hyper-fixated on books and snakes. I refused to eat any vegetables and most meat. I could sit at the dinner table for hours staring at food rather than eating it.
I would only wear certain textures. I melted down. I sorted all my stuffed animals by rank and taped them to the wall in their ranked order.
As a teen, I was awkward and unpopular. I was most noted for my hyper-fixations on socially uncomfortable topics like schizophrenia, abortion politics, history, and books. I had read every book in the [i[Dune[/i]<series by the time I was 13.
People called me “harsh and abrasive.” I had an eating disorder. I struggled with depression, anxiety, and rigidity.
My only friend’s parents banned her from spending time with me because I ate the chicken they cooked for me by peeling it apart and sorting it into piles by texture and color. Apparently, this is very upsetting to normal people. If I had been a boy who liked trains, I would have been in behavioral therapy since I was 4.
Yet, on many days, I find that all of this has been a gift. It is a gift that I wasn’t a boy who liked trains and was diagnosed early or a girl who people wanted to bend into normality without even being diagnosed. My life was allowed to be beyond strange, and that is my greatest asset, and it was only possible because I was never forced to be normal.
This life has only been possible because I never knew enough to chain or repress my autism. My parents were odd themselves, and as the oldest child of two parents who separated and had other children with other people, I was not noticed as much as I should have been. My oddities were written off as trauma or just being a “difficult child.”
As an adult, I married young to a man who was odd and too hyper-focused on his career to see my peculiarities. I kept isolated and made sure I only interacted with normal people for two to three hours because I was very aware that after three hours, I became so odd that people noticed it. I knew how odd I was, but I didn’t fight it. No one told me I should. I hid it because I didn’t want to deal with its social consequences, but I never fought it.
As a therapist, I have learned that this is what makes autism crippling. It is crippling when you fight it. When you try to make yourself normal. If you surrender to your autistic self, you can be amazing, and you can live an amazing life. Not everyone will like you, and some people will hate and avoid you, but you will find that life can be wonderful.
In our autistic adults’ group, I have met some of the most remarkable people I think the world has ever seen. Brilliant physicists and engineers, artists who can make crafts and art that humbles me and reminds me of the capacity of humans, and people who can recite every type of micro bacteria in a sloth’s fur. Some of the people I have met in these groups try to hide who they are, and they are the ones who break. The people from the group and the clients I have that flourish are the ones that embrace their neurodiversity.
I have a book coming out in a month, The Unmasking Autism Workbook for Autistic Adults and the message in this book is the message I send to all autistic adults and all people who have autistic family members. Autism should never be hidden. It should be something to be worn like a badge of honor.
I would only wear certain textures. I melted down. I sorted all my stuffed animals by rank and taped them to the wall in their ranked order.
As a teen, I was awkward and unpopular. I was most noted for my hyper-fixations on socially uncomfortable topics like schizophrenia, abortion politics, history, and books. I had read every book in the [i[Dune[/i]<series by the time I was 13.
People called me “harsh and abrasive.” I had an eating disorder. I struggled with depression, anxiety, and rigidity.
My only friend’s parents banned her from spending time with me because I ate the chicken they cooked for me by peeling it apart and sorting it into piles by texture and color. Apparently, this is very upsetting to normal people. If I had been a boy who liked trains, I would have been in behavioral therapy since I was 4.
Yet, on many days, I find that all of this has been a gift. It is a gift that I wasn’t a boy who liked trains and was diagnosed early or a girl who people wanted to bend into normality without even being diagnosed. My life was allowed to be beyond strange, and that is my greatest asset, and it was only possible because I was never forced to be normal.
This life has only been possible because I never knew enough to chain or repress my autism. My parents were odd themselves, and as the oldest child of two parents who separated and had other children with other people, I was not noticed as much as I should have been. My oddities were written off as trauma or just being a “difficult child.”
As an adult, I married young to a man who was odd and too hyper-focused on his career to see my peculiarities. I kept isolated and made sure I only interacted with normal people for two to three hours because I was very aware that after three hours, I became so odd that people noticed it. I knew how odd I was, but I didn’t fight it. No one told me I should. I hid it because I didn’t want to deal with its social consequences, but I never fought it.
As a therapist, I have learned that this is what makes autism crippling. It is crippling when you fight it. When you try to make yourself normal. If you surrender to your autistic self, you can be amazing, and you can live an amazing life. Not everyone will like you, and some people will hate and avoid you, but you will find that life can be wonderful.
In our autistic adults’ group, I have met some of the most remarkable people I think the world has ever seen. Brilliant physicists and engineers, artists who can make crafts and art that humbles me and reminds me of the capacity of humans, and people who can recite every type of micro bacteria in a sloth’s fur. Some of the people I have met in these groups try to hide who they are, and they are the ones who break. The people from the group and the clients I have that flourish are the ones that embrace their neurodiversity.
I have a book coming out in a month, The Unmasking Autism Workbook for Autistic Adults and the message in this book is the message I send to all autistic adults and all people who have autistic family members. Autism should never be hidden. It should be something to be worn like a badge of honor.
_________________
Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
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