Wednesday, April 13, 2016

How to make an autistic person nomal


How to make an Autistic person normal.



I can hear your hackles rising from here. 
It’s not a nice thought, is it? How do you change someone who functions in a different way enough that they can seem the same as everyone else,and should we?
Does this cure the person? Does this make them better? Does this treat Autism as some kind of illness instead of a lifelong condition?
I’m asking all these questions because it’s essentially what happened to me.
When I couldn’t cope with the texture of mushrooms because they made me retch, I was told we would all stay at the dinner table until my plate was clear.
So I practiced swallowing grapes whole when I was alone. If I could swallow a whole, large grape, then I could swallow a mouthful of food without chewing, without having to deal with the texture beyond the swallowing of it.
I don’t recommend this as a course of action! It’s not sensible. I was lucky not to choke. It is not a good idea, I was an idiot child trying to find my way.
I learnt very early on, that if you draw attention to things that bother you, then other children (and sometimes adults) do them more.
So when the table was laid, I would make sure to move the knives and forks and spoons of the cutlery that had had patterned metal handles. Touching them hurt me. It felt horrible. But if I asked to swap them later I would be told not to make such a fuss, doing things quietly worked better.
But I couldn’t stop people cutting their food on their plates. I couldn’t stop the sound that set off reflex hallucinations in my tastebuds and made my food taste of what I can only describe as “that flavour you get when you lick your finger, put an AA battery’s end against it, and then lick the opposite end of the battery”.
I’d press my head against my shoulder and try to muffle the noise of the worst of it, but I couldn’t block it out. If I asked people to stop sometimes they would laugh and do it more, sometimes they would try to stop. But I couldn’t predict which it would be.
I didn’t understand why they would do it when it hurts.
But I learned.
I learned people laugh at you and call you names if you’re a teen girl who likes bright colourful leggings over bodysuits and culottes (it was the 90s, insert fashion faux pas of your era here).
And although I argued it at the time, I learned that what I wear is important to other people, even if it’s not to me.
When I was alone I would have the time and space to meltdown. Sometimes at school I would hide away in the loos. Sometimes I’d hide in a book. Sometimes I’d hide in being loud and confident and opinionated.
Sometimes I’d fail to hide, and shutdown, and then I’d have to find an appropriately teen-angsty reason for it, because I knew that other people weren’t doing what I did.
I learned how to be normal. 
I learned how to keep my stims private. I’d practice not moving. I’d concentrate on not doing them. 
Sometimes if it got too much, I’d excuse myself so that I could find a place to be alone for a minute and stim. Like a secret smoker getting her nicotine fix behind closed doors. Because grown ups don’t do that sort of thing.
And what good has it done me? I’ve suffered from depression and exhaustion. After one particularly nasty bout of workplace bullying that was handled laughably, I had a bit of a breakdown. A counsellor said I was burnt out, and I was. I was exhausted. Utterly shattered by presenting this constant façade of normality to the world.
I still hadn’t realised I was autistic. I’d worked as a Learning Support Assistant, helping autistic teens, as one of my many jobs, and it still didn’t click. Even when they said things like, “You really get it!” I didn’t realise.
I have been battling myself for years. I have been fighting every day to present someone to the world that you will like.
And you still don’t like her! I don’t blame you. I don’t think I like her much either. 
The people who like me in this world, are the people who have seen the real me. This voice. This one I’m using now. 
So why did I learn to hide it, and how the hell do I let it out?
Yes. You can teach an autistic person (not all, not everyone, and never completely) to behave like everyone else, but why would you want to?
Somewhere along the way I lost me. 
I knew I was here but I couldn’t find who that was. Was I Work-Rhi? Drunk-Rhi? Mum-Rhi?
It’s not that those people aren’t a part of me, but they’re a construction. They’re a wall between you and me. 
What was done to me, was done in utter ignorance of what I am and what I needed. What was done was done because I was being judged by the wrong standards.
There are ways that we all have to learn to fit in. Stims that hurt you or others, need to be swapped for stims that don’t. We all make adjustments. We all grow up.
Three year olds need to learn how to express their emotions with words where possible. We all have to change and fit and adapt, but we don’t all have to fit to one mould. It’s important that we don’t.
So here’s my analogy. Day by day I cased myself in clay. I didn’t notice I was doing it. I was still walking and talking, but each day I clagged a new bit on. Small bits, big bits, all the things I learned.
At first it wasn’t too heavy, but after a while it started weighing me down, exhausting me.
But still I added more. The more I learned, the more I added.
Then one day I read an article about a woman with autism, and that article described me. It described me in great detail.
And I suddenly noticed the clay. It now covered all of me. Every part.
Since then I’ve been trying to crack it open. 
Getting a diagnosis was a big step forwards and it’s let me get a hand free.
I’m still working out how much I can chip away at once and still feel safe. I’m a work in progress. A reverse-Rodin. 
How do you make an autistic person norma
Read articel here


spirit of autism

Since being diagnosed with autism in my mid-30s, I’ve been re-thinking a lot of things.

I’ve spent a lifetime of trying to appear to be the same as everyone else. I’ve been watching. I’ve been studying. Every book, article, overheard conversation, brings me that little bit closer to passing for normal.
I’ve spent a long time thinking about who I ought to be.
And I thought you were all doing it too. Maybe not everyone. Maybe a few of you were in on the secret, but I assumed, as we all do, that the way I see the world is the way everyone does.
Now I know that when I don’t understand you, it’s not that I’ve missed out the rules of the game, it’s that you’re playing Monopoly whilst I’m playing Rugby Union.
It’s not that I’m coming at it from the wrong angle, it’s that I don’t have the… Whatever-it-is to understand you. I don’t get it. I can’t.
And that’s ok.
That’s what I’m coming to terms with. It’s ok. It’s ok that I don’t want to make small talk, and it’s ok that you do. There will be times when I will. I hope there will be times when you won’t.
I’ve been working on analogies. I like analogies. They’re pictures that you can lay over life to try to make sense of it.
Since finding out who I am, I have been struck by several things:-
When you try to describe what being Autistic is, everyone says, “Well I do that too.”
People say this because it’s hard to describe being autistic. Often you end up clutching a collection of behaviours, such as social exhaustion, hating the phone, wiggling your feet.
And other people say, “I don’t like using phones either, and I wiggle my feet, and I’m shattered after a night out, maybe I’m a bit spectrumy!”
So you look at them and something inside dies a little, because you’ve not communicated what you wanted to, and you really don’t want to have to tell them about the time when you were walking down the corridor, and suddenly there was too much noise from all the people, and your head started spinning, and the lights were wrong, and the space was wrong and everything started shutting down on you. Because that behaviour makes you vulnerable.
So you smile (because that’s what people do), and you try to stop the conversation, because now you’re upset at yourself, and you can’t maintain eye contact well when you’re upset.
(I say eye-contact! I mean it’s hard to even look at people’s noses, or anywhere near their faces, when it gets too much)
It’s ok. It’s ok that I cocked up because I focused on the behaviours and not the causes. It’s hard. It’s complicated.
How do you explain to someone what it’s like to not have something that you don’t even know exists?
It’s like trying to describe silence to someone who has always lived their life beneath a roaring waterfall. They won’t hear the water. They’ll take it for granted. They’ll say, “This is silence.”
How do I describe a lack of social processing to someone who doesn’t know they do it?
How do I describe how much active processing I put in to everyday tasks, which they can happily do on automatic without noticing?
Did you know that when asked a complicated question, most people will look away from the questioners face, because it frees up processing power? Processing that they don’t even know happens. They will be studying expression in great detail, without knowing it. It’s like having a computer that just provides the answers.
My computer tells me what it sees. It gives me a literal view of the face and its changes. I can use these to compare to what I have learned. I can use my stored knowledge to try to work out what you are thinking, what I should do, what it is you need from me.
But my computer doesn’t give me the answers. Mine gives me problems to solve.
When you’ve spent a lifetime pretending to be normal, you shouldn’t be surprised that people think you’re not autistic.
People have told me how normal I am. How they don’t see any part of me that is different. I think I should assume this is a compliment. I’m sure it’s meant as one.
To me it’s a mirror showing just how much effort I have put in to being someone socially acceptable. Each aspect of me that is deemed “presentable” is an effort. It’s a sort of me. It’s a kind of me.
But it ought not to be.
Oh dear lord the self doubt. I never thought I could accuse myself of not being who I deep-down know I am, in so many inventive and insidious ways.
Post-diagnosis has been a roller-coaster of elation and depression and acceptance and reluctance and “oh god I get to be me forever?!” (Said sometimes joyously and sometimes in pain).
I am autistic.
I am an autistic woman.
I am an autistic mother, person, wife, daughter and so on and on and on.
I am Aspie. For some reason I’ve taken against using Asperger’s to describe myself, even though it’s accurate, I think for some reason it feels euphemistic.
I don’t like euphemisms.
I don’t want a sanitised, socially acceptable me anymore. I want to be the me that I am. The me that I have always been.
Because I am socially acceptable. I might be a bit peculiar if I let it all hang out, I might seem a bit less self-assured and a bit more terrified, but that’s ok, isn’t it? Other people get to break those rules? I may not be good at breaking rules, but maybe I can add new ones, a few sub-clauses here and there.
It’s what I’m striving for. Being a bit more me. Now is the time.
So today I didn’t hide my hand in my pocket when I needed to stim. It’s the little things.
Tomorrow I will contemplate world domination.


Vidio watch below