Archive for Belonging

OMG! OMG! OMG! I’m Making a Friend!

I spent an hour today with my local Aspie counterpart. She’s so nice, and she enjoys so many of the things that I enjoy!

Before she came to my house, my worst fear was that we wouldn’t connect, and that the hour would pass very slowly. As it turned out, when she walked up to my porch and started talking to Bob and me, I liked her immediately. Between giving her a tour of the house and talking about all the stuff that was beautiful and interesting to both of us, the time flew by, and it was time for her to go. It felt as though she’d been here for just five minutes.

In our house, we have a small library (which is actually a wide hallway framed with bookshelves all around). She had mentioned how much she loves seeing people’s books and had wanted to spend some time looking at ours. We didn’t get to spend too much time in the library today, so the next time she comes over, I’m going to let her explore the books undisturbed by any narration about my house. I lent her a copy of the book I had written (about my elderly friend), and we hugged before she left. Hugs!

I was very keyed up about this visit beforehand. Then, once she got here, and I became aware how short a visit it would be, I felt rushed. When that happens, I sometimes have a wee bit of trouble finding the words I want to say. So, I’m not sure if what I wanted to say made its way out of my mouth in any kind of coherent fashion, but who cares? We had fun.

To think that I had been feeling so insecure about meeting her! Last night, I was feeling that whatever social skills I used to have were NT emulation skills, and that they were gone. What would I use instead? I talked with Bob about my last seven years of nearly unabated social failure, all of which seemed to begin around the same time that my relationship with him started. I used to think that I hadn’t made any friends in the last place we lived because people had blamed me for Bob’s departure from the synagogue. I was very angry about it for a long time. All of those social failures have been psyching me out in the present, even in a new town in which people have been welcoming and friendly. I didn’t know whether I could make a friend anymore. I didn’t know whether I knew how, or whether I had the courage to try.

But now, I’m seeing my “social failures” in a whole new light. I’m realizing that the reason for my social difficulties was that my NT emulation skills went “bye-bye” when Bob and I got together seven years ago. For most of my adult life, I’d been in relationships in which I’d needed to somehow “improve.” I was always the one with the “issues,” the one who was never quite right, the one whose ”stuff” was always getting in the way. When I got together with Bob, I found someone who loves me just as I am. In fact, Bob loves things about me that had driven other people crazy.

So, when we first got together, I started to relax and to take another look at myself. I started to think, “Hey, I’m really all right just as I am!” And then, in my Aspie innocence, I assumed that the whole world would be equally excited at this unforeseen and utterly miraculous transformation. I was loved! I was fine! And I was ready to show the world who I really was! In my excitement, I started acting like an honest, straightforward, tell-it-like-it-is Aspie—even before I knew I was an Aspie! I mean, how brilliant is THAT? 

Not very. The results in the neuro-typical world were not good. Not good at all. My life became a constant series of culture clashes, as though I were speaking French in a country where no one had ever heard of France. But French was so natural to me. What was wrong with these people?

Oops.

I’ve finally realized that because of my relationship with Bob, my NT emulation skills have been absent for several years without my really knowing it. Much of that time, I’ve been leaping into all sorts of situations, trying to do the NT dance, and ending up feeling alone and alienated. Once I got diagnosed, I began to worry about all the problems I’d have once I gave up all pretense of being NT. Until last night, it hadn’t occurred to me that my NT emulation skills have been at the bottom of a landfill in Franklin County for several years.

And yet, miracle of miracles, my relationship with Bob continues to grow and thrive. What does that tell me? Can I actually be who I am? Can I actually make friends? Can I actually feel like a human being again?

I think so. I hope so.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Dreams

Dreams

Hold fast to dreams
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird
That cannot fly.

Hold fast to dreams
For when dreams go
Life is a barren field
Frozen with snow.

                –Langston Hughes

Thank you to everyone for your love and support after my last post. Every word means so much to me.

Not surprisingly, I’ve just come out of another bout of grief and tears this morning, feeling the impact of so many dreams that have died. Certainly, some of my dreams have come true, and my grief in no way diminishes my gratitude. But right now, the grief is hitting me like a tsunami. Every day is a constant process of letting go of dreams that have propelled me all my life. I thought I’d let go of all the big ones, but I’m still hanging on, and I have to stop. Hanging on just brings me heartache.

I’m going to write about the dreams I’ve come up against today. Writing helps me feel like I have some control over what’s going on, but please don’t take this piece as any kind of indication that everything in my mind feels orderly and precise. At the moment, I’m feeling about as burned out and confused as I’ve ever felt in my life.

Where Did the Past Go?
This morning, I was sitting in the kitchen window, looking out at the orange lilies in the next-door neighbor’s yard. The light was dappled by the chestnut tree, and the shaded yard nearly had a feeling of autumn about it. But it’s not autumn, and what I was seeing was a memory from when I was a child. The only flowers we had were the same type of orange lilies; they grew by the side of our house. I had a very strong sense memory of being a little kid, living in that house, running around with my brother, feeling like everything was okay. Of course, most of the time, I didn’t feel like it was okay. Most of the time, I was anxious and fearful. But on a Saturday morning in summer, when all we had to do was go down to the drugstore, buy baseball cards and candy, and spend the rest of the day playing baseball, or wandering in the woods, or pretending to be Batman and Robin, life felt like it ought to feel—happy, hopeful, innocent.

My dream was that it would stay that way, and that my brother and I would always be close, but of course, that didn’t happen. My parents are gone, and my brother is lost to me. For the sake of his privacy, I won’t go into details, but suffice it to say that he is not someone I want to know anymore (and he appears to feel the same way about me). How we started out being innocent and happy, and ended up where we are now, is hard to explain. I could tell you everything that happened, but it would never be the whole story, because the whole story is not a collection of events, but the complex working out of pain, fear, love, anger, and confusion. It feels like my original family got put into a centrifuge, and each of us got spun out in different directions, never to return. It’s overwhelming for me, and unbearably sad. I want those days back. I want that dream back. I want to make it all work out just fine. But it’s all over. I can’t change any of it.

I’m Not Who I Was Supposed to Be
I was reading an article today on the Internet, and I noticed that the author was the daughter of my childhood piano teacher. Her name stood out to me because of a particularly sweet childhood memory. One day, while I was at my piano lesson, playing a piece that I was going to perform in Boston, the author and her sister, ages 2 and 4, were standing on either side of the piano bench, jumping up and down, screaming their heads off. When I was done with the piece, my piano teacher said, “If you can play a sonata through THAT, you can play it anywhere!”

So, today, I did a little bit of searching about what this woman has been doing with her life, and it turned out that before writing a well-reviewed book, she had been a producer for Dateline NBC. That’s when another level of grief hit. You see, I was a really smart kid. I mean, really smart. I taught myself to read. I got all As in school. I nearly aced every SAT and college board I took. I was gifted in music. I won a statewide piano contest. I got into an Ivy League university. I was supposed to be successful. I was supposed to be a producer, a director, a musician, a lawyer, a doctor or Anything Other Than What I Am. That was the dream, and it guided my entire childhood and adolescence. Now, I look at people who couldn’t do what I did when I was just a kid, and I see that there is no way I could ever do what they’ve done as adults.

Every now and then, I torture myself by going online and searching for the names of people from high school, just to see what they’re doing. It’s unbelievable what people are doing. They’re out in the world being important and successful. I keep asking the question: How can people have surpassed me like this? I never expected to be famous, but I once was full of promise. Could I have ever worked at the jobs they have? No way. I know it. And yet, I can’t quite grasp why not. I know that raw intelligence isn’t everything. I know that I don’t understand (or respect) social politics. I know that I get overloaded in groups of more than two people (and sometimes even that’s a stretch). I know all these things, but I still can’t quite accept what’s happened. The gulf between who I was supposed to be and who I am is so deep and so wide that my mind can’t take it in and make any sense of it.

It’s like looking at someone who has died. How can the person be alive one moment and gone the next? The mind can’t go there. You want to say to the person, “Just wake up.” You want to see where the person has gone off to. But you can’t. And that’s what’s happening to me. I still see myself as that person with the dream of doing Whatever She Wants, but I’m not that person. That person is gone. Where did she go, and when? At this point, I’m so sensitive to everything, I can barely go outside my door. 

What Could Be More Important than the Approval of Others?
When I was in high school, I was determined to be one of the cool kids. Of course, I failed miserably, but what did that matter? There were other kids I could have hung out with—the ones everyone made fun of because they were shy and awkward and carried slide rules and pocket protectors. I liked them just fine, but I saw what they had to put up with. I saw the cruel things that people wrote in their yearbooks. I saw how people laughed at them every day. I saw that they were perpetual outsiders, and I fled from them because I wanted to be an insider.

So, as I got older, I straightened my hair, lost weight, wore conventional clothes, and tried to become acceptable. I’ve never stopped. I’ve been trying and trying and trying to be one of the cool people. I have a million faces, and I have a million clever things to say, all in the service of not wanting to be laughed at and rejected.

I cannot be weird. I cannot be an outsider. I cannot be looked upon as an oddity or a freak. I must be like everyone else. Those were my prime directives in life, and I once dreamt that I could fulfill them.

Guess what? Game over. Bye bye to that dream. See ya. Nice knowin’ ya. And no, you can’t ever come back.

You Mean You Don’t Want My Energy for Free?
When my daughter first started school, she was in the eighth grade, and I offered to volunteer at her school as a tutor. It’s a small school, and all the teachers wear many hats, but they didn’t want or need my help. Of course, they didn’t say it outright. They said, “That’s a sweet offer” and then proceeded to ignore me. Who knows why? Am I too smart? Too direct? Too weird? I don’t know. Once the homeschooling was done, I was hoping to use my skills as a teacher, and I was offering them for free. But no one ever took me up on it.

At this point, I wouldn’t be able to help out at the school because of my sensory issues, but it still hurts that I never got the chance.

Seeking My Fellow Aspies and Auties
Okay, now that you’ve come this far, let me get to the latest and greatest dream-that-must-die. Remember the school for autistic young people, where the person was so excited to get my offer of serving as a volunteer? Where she said that they were completely open to my needs around sensory issues? Remember that? Sounded good, didn’t it?

The last email I sent them was on June 24, suggesting that we get together on June 30. That was over two weeks ago, and I haven’t heard a word—not even to say, “I’m sorry, June 30th won’t work, but how about some time in July?”

Now, I tried really, really, REALLY hard to not get my hopes up about this school, because things just generally have a pattern of not working out in rather mysterious and inexplicable ways. But, the truth is, I had my hopes up, big time. It wasn’t just about having something to do. It was about being around autistic people. Since then, I have found another Aspie in town, and we are emailing, but other than that, I have no local contact with anyone autistic. There are groups in Northampton and Amherst and Keene and Springfield, but I don’t live in any of those places, and I can’t possibly drive there and expect to have any energy left when I actually arrive.

So yeah, okay, I had my heart set on being at the school. I could walk there and be among some autistic people. Oh well.

I keep wondering what I’ve done wrong, and why people don’t want my energy when I’m willing to give it for free. Am I too direct? I’ve only spent 25 years and a gazillion dollars in therapy being told to be who I am and to ask for what I need. So I do, as clearly and as authentically as possible, and voila! I still get left by the side of the road. I’m a perpetual outcast. It’s really unbelievable. It would be okay if I loathed people and wanted nothing to do with them, but I love people and I want to help them. I just keep hitting the big brick wall that everyone else seems to see but me.

I just don’t understand. I try to be NT: no dice. I try to be myself: no dice. I try to be direct: no dice. I try to be gently patient and encouraging: no dice. I try to be super-competent: no dice. I try to acknowledge my challenges: no dice.

I would really like to get together with my new Aspie friend in town, but to tell you the truth, I’m scared. It seems like everything I touch in the outside world magically screws up. I keep thinking that there would be no social pressure with another Aspie. I keep thinking about how relieved I would feel to actually meet her in person. But I’d probably just cry for much of our first meeting, and whoops! another person gone.

So it’s hard to dream about anything that concerns other people. And I don’t want to be alone. So my life feels pretty awful right now.

Bob keeps saying that I just have to keep letting go of the dreams that don’t work so that other dreams can take their place. But I’m not sure I can bear any other dreams. They break my heart. If I could understand why things don’t work out, maybe I could change what I’m doing, but I don’t understand it at all.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

At a Low Point

When I first got my Asperger’s diagnosis, I was so relieved. I was able to look back over the course of my life, from the distant past to recent events, and see the common thread linking everything. For awhile, it felt great. I love when things make sense, and the Asperger’s diagnosis made beautiful and astonishing sense.

Then, after a month or so, I got done walking on air and began feeling a lot of grief for the things I couldn’t change, for the person I couldn’t become, and for the end of believing that I could do anything I wanted to do. Since that time, I’ve been in a sort of holding pattern, and I’ve felt like I was doing okay. But now, I feel like the bottom is falling out.

On the outside, nothing has changed. I am physically healthy, my marriage is great, my kid is happy, I can write no matter how fried my head feels, and anyone looking in from the outside would probably assume that I’m doing just fine. The problem is, because I don’t go out much anymore, very few people can actually see me from the outside. I’m feeling an absolute aversion to going out into the world. Some days, I can take walks on quiet streets, so long as I’m a) wearing my Sonic Defender earplugs, b) wearing sunglasses, and c) keeping my eyes fixed on the ground whenever I see a person anywhere near me. I have to control what I look at and what I listen to, as much as I can. But most days, I don’t want to go anywhere.

One by one, I’m watching all the dreams I had for my life fall away. The funny thing is, I thought I’d already let go of so many. What could be left? I just had a few small dreams I was holding onto—going to the movies with my husband, having dinner out, getting dressed up and working at the store. Last year at this time, Bob and I went to the movies on Saturday nights, and I loved getting dressed up for work. I was even hoping to find a part-time job. But now, just a year later, even those small things are gone. I look at all the clothes that I bought last summer at the store, and I want to cry. They belong to an era in which I naively thought I’d be a strong, confident part of the world. That era seems very far away.

It seems like anything I want to do “out there” isn’t possible. Even the people from the school for autistic kids haven’t gotten back in touch with me, and it’s been over two weeks. Maybe they read my blog and decided they didn’t like me? Or maybe, I’m just supposed to let go of the world “out there” and stand face to face with the unmistakeably autistic person I am.

I have very little energy for NT emulation. I know how much it burns me out. I go into the world and put on my face, get overwhelmed and anxious, and come home unable to locate myself. Somewhere between being housebound and being in the world, there’s a huge rift and I fall in. Every time.

I love the natural world, and I love people, and I find the things that people do very interesting, and sometimes very beautiful. But it’s all overwhelming to my senses. When I go into the world, and I take in all the sense impressions and emotional energy, I end up feeling like I’ve been hit by a train.

It used to be that I was just afraid of people with bad energy, but I can see those types coming from a mile away. It’s not hard for me to spot them, and it’s not hard for me to walk away from them. It’s the really friendly people that give me the difficulty now. I want to be around them, I want to talk with them, and I want to be one of them, and yet, I simply can’t. I went to the thrift store with Bob last week, just to see how it felt. Everyone was so welcoming and so glad to see me, and I loved seeing them, too. But after a half hour of being in the store, I was disoriented and exhausted. It took me most of the next two days to recover.

Then, on Sunday, I had an emotional blow-out, and spent much of the day crying over feeling so isolated and alone. On Monday, Bob left for New York for a couple of days, and I was still crying. On Tuesday, I stayed in all day. By Wednesday, I was sitting at the breakfast table, handflapping and rocking. In the past, when I’d get overloaded, I’d have to think about what to do—lie under my weighted blankets, work out, sing, do some hard work. Now, I’m just stimming, early and often.

From the point of view of the autistic person I am, this kind of stimming is progress. In fact, I love it. It feels natural. It feels like some sort of ancient healing ritual. It feels like I’ve lived my whole life unable to speak my native language, and now I can.

But from the point of view of the highly accomplished and assertive person I used to be, it feels like I’ve been the hapless victim of a major fraud. How can I possibly have lived on this planet for 50 years without knowing that I’m autistic? I can see living here for one year, or two years, or even ten years without anybody noticing, but 50 years? How is it that even possible? Why did I have to burn out before the truth revealed itself? And now that I know, what’s going to become of me?

It’s really hitting me hard that there is no going back. I cannot fool myself into thinking that if I get dressed up, go out, and work at the store that somehow, I’m approaching the vicinity of the Land of Normal, where everything will be okay. When Bob is here, I do all right, because he’s easy to be with and he loves me. When my daughter is here, all the better, because I love seeing her and hearing the things she shares about her life. But when I’m alone, without either of them, my level of fear goes off the charts. I think, what if I were left completely alone? What if this were the next 20, or 30, or 40 years of my life? It’s not the food shopping and the driving that worries me. It’s the being alone. Forever.

I know that everyone has these kinds of fears. But neuro-typical people have many more opportunities to go out and get a break from the aloneness. I don’t have those opportunities. I can’t make plans and hope that they’ll work, because I keep trying to make ever more humble and sensible plans, and they still don’t work.

Right now, I am so totalled by all these realizations that Bob is coming very close to canceling his trip to California in August. My daughter will be at camp during the time that he would be away, and the idea of a week and a half at home alone feels impossible. I used to handle his extended trips by making plans with friends, but it didn’t really help. In fact, in some ways, I felt more isolated. I loved seeing my friends, but when I came home, I’d feel twice as alone as I had before. Even Bob’s short trips to New York are terribly difficult.

So I’m in a major crisis. It’s not a life-threatening crisis, but it’s a crisis nonetheless. I want Bob to stay here as much as possible. I don’t have a problem with his going to New York to see his dad, because his dad needs him and they need to be together. Even thought it’s difficult, I can support it. But I also need a lot of support for myself right now, and while I’m still trying to find ways to get the support outside of my house, I need Bob to be nearby. If his daughter wants to see him in August, perhaps she can come east and they can hang out in the house she grew up in. Bob feels like that might be a good solution. He’s not ready to make a final decision at the moment, but I think that’s where it’s going.

For my part, I’m starting to make some contact with a couple of local agencies that work with developmentally disabled people. It’s useless to pretend I have it all together when the whole damned facade is crumbling. I hope I can find some support locally and feel less alone in my everyday life.

You are all an amazing lifeline.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Thinking Locally

A few weeks back, when I decided to let go of my activities in the outside world, I had a feeling of wanting to start from my home base. I didn’t have the energy to make the hour’s drive to Massachusetts to see my OT, and I needed time away from the store to figure out how to be there without feeling like an NT impersonator. My only remaining outside commitment was to see my AS-literate therapist in New Hampshire every other week.

After my third visit to the therapist, I decided to stop going there, too. I liked the therapist very much. She was warm, attentive, and very encouraging. But the 35-40 minute trip to her office in New Hampshire felt like too much of a stretch. The drive made me feel lonely. Here I was, driving to the next state, to an unfamiliar place, to a town I didn’t live in, to get support for how to live my life back home. It made me feel desolate.

As I’ve let go of these activities, I’ve been happy to be at home much of the day, able to follow my internal rhythm, without the pressure of having to go anywhere at any particular time. I’ve been able to work in the garden, growing flowers and vegetables. I’ve been able to eat in a healthier way, and I’ve been getting exercise every day. I’ve even begun work on my book.

The more time I spend at home, the more I’m reminded that Bob and I didn’t buy a house in the center of town for nothing. We like being able to walk everywhere. We like leaving the car at home. So, it became clear that whatever I do with my life in the outside world, it has to happen locally. I have to find a way to stake my claim to the town I live in and find a place where I can be myself.

As it turns out, my decision to stay local is already bearing fruit. As I wrote last week, the manager at the thrift store told Bob that she had distributed my “coming-out” article to everyone on the staff, and that everyone was fine with it. On Friday afternoon, she sent me the following message by email:

“It has been so busy at the shop and we miss you terribly. All the staff have said is, ‘When is she coming back?’ So, please come back when you can and we will do whatever we can to accommodate your needs and to make you comfortable. We appreciate your thoughtful nature, your kind and generous spirit, your clarity, your beautiful presence. We honor your journey…come share it with us. Our very best wishes to you, my dear. Let us know how it goes. Hope to see you soon.”

Is that amazing, or WHAT? I forwarded the message to Bob, and before we lit the Shabbos candles on Friday night, he read it aloud at the dinner table. We both had tears in our eyes.

So now, I am thinking that I will start by working at the store for an hour, one day a week, just to see what I can do and how to make it work for me. I will probably end up going there more often, just to look around, because it’s a friendly place and they have lots of neat stuff there. I really love thrift stores, and it’s one of the friendliest and most interesting ones I’ve seen.

The next step is to make a time to meet with a staff person from the local school for autistic youth. I emailed my contact person last week, but I have not heard back yet. In any case, I feel good about the way that I’m managing the process.

Thank you to everyone for helping me find my way along this path.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

On Being True to Myself

Once again, I’ve come around to the issue of how to be true to myself.

For most of my life, I’ve made a practice of emulating other people in order to know how to navigate. I’ve been so single-mindedly focused on getting it “right” that when things go “wrong,” I feel like I’ve messed up. But, in truth, I don’t mess up any more than anyone else on the planet. So why does it feel that way?

The feeling derives from an old, false belief that something is amiss inside me. Of course, when I’m thinking clearly, I know that nothing is amiss at all. I’m autistic. That’s neither good nor bad. It just is.

But I still feel divided, in a couple of ways.

1) I am firmly grasping myself by the hand and bringing myself out into the open, while at the same time, my old conditioning is kicking in and saying, “You’re doing WHAT? Hide that person!”

Now that I’ve peeled off the masks, I can see how my life experience has taken its toll on my self-esteem. All the times that I’ve been bullied, rejected, laughed at, or shunned have made their mark. And yet, miraculously, I can see that there is nothing wrong with me. When people have been cruel, it was all about them and their blindness. That’s all. So I hear the old conditioning that tells me to hide, and I say, “Well, I’ve taken your advice for half a century, and thanks for trying to help, but it’s time for you to retire.”

2) Who exactly am I, anyway? Exactly where is the line between being my wonderful, loving autistic self and pretending to be someone I’m not? Where is the line between holding onto my power and letting it slip away?

After all, I have social skills and I feel fine using them. The problem arises when I use them and pay absolutely no attention to the voice of my neurology ringing me up and saying:

Hello? Yes, I know you have social skills, but I’m getting tired…Yes, yes…of course…I know being at the store is fun…Yes, I know, but it’s been a couple of hours, and I really need to go home.

If I tune into my neurology and give it the respect it deserves, I’ll know when I’m in danger of crossing over from enjoying myself to driving myself. The problem is, how much is too much? Do I leave at the first warning sign of overload, or do I push myself a little further? I’m not sure. The answer to these questions is still a work in progress.

I feel as though I have a foot in each world—the ASD world and the neuro-typical world. I’ve got neurological wiring that makes me autistic, and I have autistic friends I’ve made online, but I also have relationships with people who are neuro-typical, and I value those relationships. I have to be able to navigate between the two. Doing only one or the other is out of the question. But how?

I’m not sure. I certainly can’t keep going with the image of having a foot in each world.  It makes me feel like I’m nowhere. But I’ve been meditating on another image, an image of threading myself through the outside world while being aware of what’s going on inside me. Sometimes, that inner self will be communicating with other autistic people, which generally feels easy to me. And sometimes, that inner self will be communicating with neuro-typical people. At times, I find it very easy to talk with neuro-typical folks, and sometimes, I find it immensely difficult. It all depends upon the person, the nature of the environment, and the state of my sensory system at any given time.

What’s most difficult is the knowledge that I have to be prepared for other people’s fears and misconceptions. If “coming out” didn’t mean running up against everything from complete acceptance to out-and-out ignorance, it wouldn’t be so difficult. The one thing I badly need to avoid is talking to people endlessly, hoping that if I throw enough words at them, they’ll understand. I don’t have that kind of energy anymore.

As far as I can see, if I want to throw a little light on the subject of autism, I have two options: I can write, and I can be true to myself. I think I’ve got the writing part down. Now I can get on with the task of being true to who I am.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Still in a Holding Pattern: Update

ORIGINAL POST: I’m feeling very stuck. After more than a week, I still have not heard from anyone at the store. Bob is going to stop by there today to politely inquire and perhaps gently mention that a response would help me a lot right now.

It’s not just about whether I’ll be able to keep volunteering at the store. Who knows how that will work out? Right now, it’s about the fact that I feel too uncomfortable to go to the store, just to shop or look around, because I don’t know what’s going on. Have both people I emailed been on vacation for the past week? Are they angry that I sent them an email rather than making a time to sit down and talk with them? Are they scared off by the word autism?

I don’t know. And when I don’t know what’s going on, I don’t know what to expect. And when I don’t know what to expect, I won’t walk into a situation at all. I find it so overwhelming to walk into something I don’t understand that I just stay away. If I knew where people were in their process there, I’d feel better. But I have no information.

At this point, I don’t even go near the store, because I don’t want to run into anyone who works there. It would feel too uncomfortable. What if I see someone, and they ask me where I’ve been? Or if I’m coming back soon? How will I know what to say? And even if I think of something non-committal, the interaction will still feel painful and awkward.

So I’m staying pretty close to home much of the time.

About the school for autistic young people, I am feeling more optimistic. I took my friend Sue’s advice and sent an email asking to break up my visit into smaller, more manageable portions. Here’s what I sent last night:

Hi Stephanie,

Welcome back, and thanks for your message.

The best way for me to proceed is to do things one at a time. So, perhaps one day, I could come in and meet with you to talk over what your needs are and how I can help. Then, another day, I could meet with Carol, or observe one of your summer programs. If I try to do too much in one day, I’ll get overloaded.

In general, one-to-one conversations work best for me, especially when I’m meeting new people in a new place. Once I get to know people, and they get to know my strengths and challenges, I can talk in a small group. It’s work, but I can do it.

I could come in some time next week to talk with you or Carol. Would Tuesday, June 30th work, in the late morning? Except for Friday, my schedule is fairly open right now.

All the best to you,

Rachel

Between the store and the school, I’m doing my best to be myself and to speak my truth. The problem is that I’m afraid that in doing so, I will just mess everything up. It’s happened before. I speak my truth and poof! Where did everyone go? So that’s kind of scary. Okay, very scary. Okay, so scary that I just want to cry. It’s to the point that I expect that everything will fall apart for me in the world if I come out about who I really am.

I went out today and bought some flowers for my garden. I had to get out of the house and go somewhere, and I had to cheer myself up. New perennials generally help. It’s too warm this afternoon to plant them, but hopefully, the evening will be cooler.

Thanks for listening. I’ll keep you updated.

UPDATE: Bob just got back from the store. He spoke with the store manager, who said that everyone really wants me to come back. Phew! Apparently, the time delay happened because she circulated the information I sent her to everyone on the staff (eek! I wasn’t expecting that!), just to make sure that no one saw a problem. I’m not clear whether she was asking about possible logistical problems (i.e. whether they can give me tasks to do that won’t overload me) or more personal issues (i.e. whether anyone at the store has a problem working with an autistic person). Anyway, no one saw a problem either way, and she’s going to send me an email tomorrow.

So, anyway, this is good news, yes?

This coming out stuff is rough, though. I’m feeling kind of exposed, on account of I just jettisoned all the masks I usually hide under. But it’s easier than hiding. Sometimes, it doesn’t feel that way, but that’s only because the pain of hiding is familiar. I’m not used to saying “Here I Am!” But I’ve got a feeling I could begin to enjoy the experience.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Anxiety, Impatience, and Breaking a Process Down into Steps

Less than three miles from my house, there is a non-profit, year-round day school for autistic people between the ages of 11 and 22. The school provides academic classes, work on social and emotional development, attention to fitness and sensory needs, and vocational training and entrepreneurship opportunities. The ratio of teachers to students is 1:4, and each student has an aide.

I contacted the school a couple of weeks ago, because it sounds like a place I might like to volunteer. I told them a little bit about myself—my recent Asperger’s diagnosis, my old career, my new life—and I asked whether they would be interested in my helping out. Within a couple of hours, I got a very enthusiastic response from a staff person named Stephanie. Her email began with the words “Wow! This is fantastic!” 

After some emailing back and forth, I’m in the process of figuring out the best time to go and see the school environment in action. I told Stephanie that I will need to take into consideration my auditory and visual sensitivities. Her reply, and I quote: “We’re flexible and completely willing to meet your needs.” Wow. She sent me a brochure with information about their summer program so that I could decide when to come.

So far, very good.  I am excited about the possibilities. I would be able to do some community service work with autistic people in an environment that takes our way of being into account. Being able to go somewhere and just be around other autistic people would be great for me, and being able to help support the kids coming up would give me a lot of satisfaction.

However, I’m noticing how anxious I feel over actually going there and meeting the staff. I generally get pretty anxious when I have to go to a new place and meet new people. That’s not unusual. What’s really got me going today is the fact that I can go there and be my autistic self. Arghh! Go somewhere and be autistic? I can almost feel the pathways in my brain twisting and turning to comprehend this new reality.

The anxiety is showing me the roots of my impatience. I feel so much anxiety that I want to fly over all the steps I need to take before I know whether volunteering there will work. I just want to plunk myself into a role there, have everyone be happy, and get started. The anxiety about having to go through all the steps on the way is really tough for me. It always is, but this time, precisely because I do not have to pretend to be neuro-typical, it feels even tougher. I’m so used to hiding all my autistic traits when I’m out in the world that it feels really hard to remember that I won’t have to. It feels backwards.

So, instead of being anxious and impatient, I figured that I should just take the bull by the horns and write the steps down. Then, I’ll see how harmless they really are. I hope.

1. Peruse the brochure and choose a day and time to go to the school. Send an email to Stephanie, and see whether that day and time will work for the staff.

2. The night before I go, try to get some sleep. (Okay, who am I kidding? I probably won’t sleep much.)

3. The day I go, I’ll be tired and anxious, but that will be okay. (Really? Truly?)

4. Meet with one or two staff people.

5. Spend some time in one of the classes, observing (or possibly participating in) an activity with the students.

6. Take careful note of how the environment is affecting me.

7. Talk with staff about their thoughts for how I might help out, including what days and times are best for them.

8. Go home and think about it a bunch.

9. Decide that it will work. ;-)

10. Start volunteering there. :D

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

A Call for Photos

I’m still fairly new to this “asking-for-what-I-need” thing, so I thought I’d give it a try on my blog. After all, while practice may not make perfect, practice definitely helps me get more comfortable with whatever skill I’m trying to learn.

Over the past couple of months, several readers have sent me photos of themselves and their loved ones. Because I’m a highly visual person, I really love being able to see the people behind the words. It helps me to remind myself that you’re all real. ;-)

So, if any of you would like to send me a photo of yourself and your family, I would love to see it. Please know that I zealously guard the privacy of all my readers, and that I would never post or disseminate any photo or email you send. The photos I have are in a folder on my computer. I’ve marked them only with first names, and on my computer they will stay.

If you’re comfortable with it, feel free to send whatever you’d like. And if you’re not comfortable with it, that’s absolutely fine, too. Whatever works for you, works for me.

I’ve posted some old photos of myself in previous blog pieces, but nothing taken within the last couple of years. So here’s a newer photo of me, taken last summer. I still look pretty much the same. As you can see, I’m still a hippie chick at 50:

Have a wonderful weekend!

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Toward a New Sense of Belonging, Part 5: Self-Acceptance

Thank you all for your honest and insightful words in response to my last post. I feel so supported and appreciated. In the world of autistic people, I can finally feel comfortable being myself. I can speak from my heart, I can say what’s on my mind, and I can know that it will be okay. After a lifetime of anxiety about saying the right things and wondering whether I’ll ever be accepted by a group of people, your acceptance and appreciation of me is a great gift.

In the process of reflecting on all of your responses, I’ve come upon a new realization. If I feel at home with myself and accept myself as I am, then I can continue to feel at home with other people who experience the world as I do. The key to developing a new sense of belonging is to cultivate a new sense of self-acceptance. As LizzieK8 pointed out so succinctly, “Accepting who you are is really the next step.”

For most of my life, the road to self-acceptance has been part of my spiritual path. I’ve done some good, useful work on this path, but I’ve never felt sufficiently grounded. In these past few days, however, my spiritual path has come down to earth and into my body. Walking that path means paying attention to the minute particulars of what I can do from day to day, understanding the work that I can’t live without, and getting a clearer sense of the kind of help and support I need.

The hardest obstacles on the path are all the negative connotations of the word autism. Like most people growing up in the larger culture, I was told long ago that autism is a scary word. The word suggests so many things that I now know to be false: that I don’t have feelings, that I’m not quite whole, that I’m “less than” everyone else, and that my family is to be admired (and pitied) for putting up with me. I know that this nonsense is all untrue, but undoing it is very hard work. Once a lie comes in and sets up house, it takes a lot of doing to root it out.

So, I’ve been looking at the internalized negative messages about my autistic traits, and I’ve started rewriting those messages. My goal is to empty them of their power to grind me down. Here are a few examples of the challenges that I’ve struggled with over the past few days, and the steps I’ve taken toward accepting who I am:

1. I cannot think clearly when other people are around, especially if I think that people are going to interrupt me.

It’s not just that I need time alone to write my blog posts. It’s that I need time alone to write a grocery list. I have a poor working memory and difficulty sequencing tasks. Both challenges are common and significant aspects of AS. 

Regarding grocery lists, I have a strategy for making sure that each member of my family gets what he or she needs. I’ve made two very complete lists of all of our staples. One list is for my daughter’s food preferences, and the other list includes the edibles that my husband and I like to have around. I take the lists, look around the kitchen, see what we need, and write it down. Even by myself, it’s difficult not to get distracted by a hundred other things, but if someone else is in the room, it’s like running a sensory obstacle course. As Saja put it, “It’s like my head is filled with sand or buzzing flies or something, until I’m all alone, and then my thoughts can flow.”

In the past, I’ve figured that I was just plain stupid, hopelessly broken, extremely lazy, or not working hard enough on my therapy. Now, I realize that I have a Pervasive Developmental Disorder, otherwise known as a high-functioning form of autism called Asperger’s Syndrome. Doesn’t that sound ever so much better?! Don’t I feel just wonderful now?! The negative connotations of all these words send up some very uplifting and useful thoughts: Not me. I’m smart. I’m not one of those people.

Well, I reply, I am smart, and those people are my people, thank you very much. My people show care and concern when one of us feels like she’s sinking. My people use their minds to try and figure out solutions to the problems we share. My people say things so straightforwardly that it shocks the less autistically wired. My people are not broken, not crazy, not heartless, and not stupid. My people are…just like me.

So…where was I? Oh, right, the grocery list. When I was writing down the grocery list this Friday, my husband started to ask me about something. I was tempted to try and think about two things at once, because, after all, I’m smart. But I didn’t. Instead, I had the presence of mind to say, in a very straightforward and friendly voice, “I can’t answer a question and do the food list at the same time.”

Simple. No judgment. Just a statement about what’s true. And my husband’s response was, “Oh, right, I forgot.”

What a relief. The more I can articulate what’s going on in a neutral way, the better I do at accepting it as a part of me.

2. I have developed a complete aversion to sweeping the floors and cleaning the bathrooms.

I’ve been doing these tasks all my adult life, and it’s been making me progressively more irritable, grouchy, and generally unpleasant. I thought I was just lazy and immature.

I’m not. Having an AS and an SPD diagnosis, I finally understand the core of the problem. It’s called severe gravitational insecurity. That’s what my OT calls it, and she has a license and everything. The problem is that when I start to move my head through space, I can’t tell where the ground is, so I don’t have a feeling of stability. Moving my head anywhere except in a line with the rest of my body is extremely disorienting.

Sweeping means that I have to bend down to look under the bed. It entails moving furniture and bending over to see what’s behind it. Cleaning the bathroom means bending down into the tub. No wonder I get grouchy and irritable. It’s my nervous system’s way of defending itself. It’s as though my nervous system is saying, ”Um, whoa, excuse me, please don’t do that thing you do with your head in mid-air and a sponge in your hand.”

So, given that my nervous system and I are trying to be friends, I’m about to do something I said I would never do: I am going to find someone to clean my house.

Trust me, this is big. I grew up in a neighborhood in which many people hired housekeepers, and my mother was very proud of the fact that she cleaned her own house. I’ve inherited that pride, and I’ve become a reverse snob about it. But I really have to let go on this one. My husband did the cleaning on Friday, but that just can’t go on indefinitely. He’s 64 and perfectly healthy, but he’s not getting any younger, and I don’t want him shouldering all these responsibilities. Since I’m dealing with an actual, real-life disability, we need to start getting used to the idea that we need assistance. We need to start calling in support now.

3. I’m about at my wit’s end with auditory overload.

I feel so crowded and so overstimulated by sound that my nervous system is regularly going haywire. It happens everywhere outside my house, especially now that people are spending more time outdoors. And at the store, there is a music speaker directly above the jewelry case where I work. At first, I’m rockin’ to the music, but pretty soon, it’s enough to make me weep.

So, given my acceptance of the fact is that I’m autistic and that sound is really hard for me, I’m considering wearing earplugs when I’m out in the world. Yes, earplugs. This weird sister just got a little weirder. I’ll still be able to hear enough to know whether someone wants to speak to me, and if they do, I’ll take out one of the earplugs and listen. I mean, what’s worse—someone thinking I’m odd, or my head feeling like it’s going to explode? Gee, let me see…

I’ll let you know how it goes.

4. I feel really awful and very insufficient when my husband picks up the slack for me.

Luckily, I’m beginning to realize why. Read carefully, because it’s weird: I actually think, and I am not lying, that basic tasks are as difficult for him as they are for me.

Of course, they aren’t. He has his limits, but going to the grocery store and chatting it up with people is fun for him. And he likes cooking, too.

So why do I share Saja’s experience of having such a loving, sensitive, supportive husband that it makes me want to weep? It’s because I’m used to driving myself relentlessly in my quest to be “normal,” all the while denying how much work it takes to navigate through the sensory world. Over the course of my life, I haven’t been as loving, or as sensitive, or as supportive toward myself as I’d like to think.

And then, one day, out of the clear blue sky, my husband comes along and says, “I love you just as you are, and I can help you take care of things,” and it just doesn’t compute. At all. Fortunately, I’m learning that it doesn’t have to compute. I just have to stand there and accept that my husband is actually speaking the truth.

After all, as one reader said to me, neuro-typical people who love, respect, and support their Aspie spouses and children have the same difficulties with belonging as we do. Because families with autistic people are so different from what most people consider normative, our neuro-typical loved ones are left standing apart in the larger world. They support us in ways that ordinary people can’t fathom. They have patience about things that other people consider impossible—like having a spouse or a child who has meltdowns. They try to understand our challenges, they know how hard we work every day, and in the best of times, they don’t expect us to be “normal.” Lots of them don’t even think that something called “normal” exists. And so, they don’t fit squarely in the NT camp, and they don’t fit squarely in the AS camp, either.

But I always feel that they are an integral part of who we are. They’ve freely consented to come with us on this journey. They’ve thrown in their lot with us. They belong here, too.

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg

Toward a New Sense of Belonging, Part 4: What’s Next?

What’s next? I have no idea. I’d hoped to say something comforting and insightful about where to go from here, but I’m full of profound sadness, loneliness, and doubt today.

I’m looking back at all the times that I thought, “This time, everything will be okay. I’ll just change my house/neighborhood/community/job/synagogue/therapist/diet/exercise program, and I’ll fit in. I’ll belong. Everything will be all right. All this struggle will be done.”

Onward and upward and all that jazz. Living in the land of hope, where my therapist told me that I was going to soar. She gave me so much hope. I can’t blame her. I imagine it’s worked a time or two for other people.

But it didn’t work for me. And in these last few days, I’ve realized that I’ve spent my whole life trying to be an NT, and that working like crazy at my therapy was part of it. Now that I can’t be an NT, what do I do? I only know what I can’t do. I can’t go to my daughter’s concert tonight. I’d give almost anything to leave the sensory overload at home and be there. She and her best friend are not just in the chorus; they’ll be in front, singing their hearts out.

But I can’t go. The sensory overload would happen in the first five minutes. My stepson is taking a video of the whole concert to distribute to anyone who wants it. So, I’ll get one of those and at least get to see the performance that way, but…still. You know.

Last year at this time, we had just moved to Vermont, and I had all kinds of plans. I was getting dressed up for work, going to the movies, going out for dinner, chatting with the neighbors, and feeling like I was finally standing in the sunshine. I thought that the hard times were over, at least for a little while.

But it didn’t work out that way. Six months after we moved here, I got the AS diagnosis, and its implications are all hitting me very hard right now.

I feel so bad for Bob. He didn’t sign up for this ASD stuff. He didn’t sign up for a wife who goes shopping at the co-op for a half hour and then needs to lie down under 30 pounds of weighted blankets for the rest of the afternoon. He didn’t sign up for a wife who is afraid to try going to the movies anymore because the sensory overload of the sound, the visuals, and the people is so difficult to bear.

He says it’s all fine, that he doesn’t think anything is wrong with me, that he loves me, that he’s so happy with me, and that I do so much for him, even though I can’t see it. He says that he did sign up for all of this, for every bit of it, because that’s what marriage is about.

I know it’s true. And I know that if the roles were reversed, I’d feel just as he does.

But, still, it wasn’t supposed to be like this.

So, where do I go from here? Through the fog and the haze, I can see that there are situations that give me some sense of belonging, although with each of them, I feel very limited in what I can do:

1. Living in our neighborhood.

The positives: I like living on our little one-block road with very friendly, kind neighbors who respect one another’s privacy and don’t play loud music. That soothes me. It’s reassuring that I can have some nice conversations, so long as it’s between me and one other person.

What’s not so great: When a neighbor comes over to chat with both Bob and me, and I can’t keep up. Then, I don’t feel soothed. I feel sad. I watch the whole interaction take place, and I can see that the other two people are connecting in some way I can’t grasp, and that I’m out of sync. It feels truly and painfully awful, like I’m in some sort of invisible time capsule that no one can see but me.

2. Going to my volunteer job

The positives: Everyone seems to be very accepting of quirky people, and I’m becoming quirkier with every new day. People genuinely seem to like me there, even though I feel completely “other” all the time.

What’s not so great: Last year, I went there looking for friends, and somewhere down the line, maybe even paid employment. Now, I just go there, do my two-hour shift, try to be friendly and helpful, feel overloaded, come home, lie down under weighted blankets, and hope like hell that my nervous system calms down sometime before the weekend.

3. Connecting with people online

The positives: I love writing this blog, reading people’s comments, getting emails from readers, and responding to them. I also love reading other people’s blogs. I have made my first Aspie friends in the past year, people with whom I correspond by email on a regular basis.

What’s not so great: It all feels so…virtual. Except for a few photos, I don’t know what anyone looks like. And I definitely don’t know what people sound like. Although my visual and auditory systems can get overwhelmed, they also help me feel reassured, especially when it comes to belonging. I’m an artist and a singer. I love visuals and sound. They just have to be the right ones.

So, I’m left having to take a very, very big leap of faith that there are people out there:

a) whom I’ve never met in person,
b) whose names, in some cases, I don’t know,
c) who feel just as I do,
d) who accept me for who I am (whoever that is), and
e) who comprise an online autistic community, to which I belong.

Do I have that right? Is that what everyone else is attempting to do? Help me out here. This requires a huge leap of faith for me. I’m not good at those. (It’s the feeling of weightlessness that comes with the leap. So often, it’s been followed by a crash.)

And of course, as I write this, I’m thinking, “I hope these people don’t think I’m completely nuts. Should I even say all this?”

Yes, I should say all this. After all, it’s real.

I’m not the only one who feels these things—am I?

© 2009 by Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg