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Is it better to accept your differences or fight them?

  • Author Author sixpakal
  • Create date Create date
  • Blog entry read time Blog entry read time 2 min read
First time blogging, not sure if there are rules. I'm just posting this thought since I can't find a place in the forums that fits. I need to get this out.
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Have you ever been told you can't do something just because of a handicap or two? All my childhood I've been told by doctors who were there to support me that I can't go far in life because of my "condition", or as I like to name it, "who I am". I'm an aspie, I don't make eye contact naturally, I can't stand certain textures, loud noises bother me, I take most things literally, body language is a foreign language, and so on. Does this mean I won't go far? Hell no! It simply means that I'll just have to work harder!

To fight these doctors I made a promise to myself as a kid. I told myself that I would never use my mental illnesses (aspergers, bi-polar, and later schizophrenia) as the reason/excuse for my actions. After that point I wouldn't scream, tense up, or appear uncomfortable around loud noises and instead just put up with them. Someone wants me to try a food that has a bad texture, I'll deal. I almost treated being "who I am" as a person with a bunch of fears. With phobias, you expose the person who is afraid gradually to the thing that scares them. Of course this doesn't work with being autistic, but I'm trying.

Today I've even taken it as far as working at a haunted house to make my wife happy. I hate the makeup I have to wear, the texture bothers me. There are loud sounds and strobe lights everywhere, it is the definition of sensory overload. I'd say you all should come see my work, but I wouldn't wish that on another aspie. Why do I put up with all of that? Because I can't let my "handicap" get in the way of a "normal" life. I have always felt that if a neurotypical could do something, I should be able to as well.

Oh, and I work as a salesman. What better way to try and read people's body language?

I can't stand not being neurotypical. Most of my life has been towards the pursuit of happiness, aka being neurotypical. It's a fight I have taken up, but I often question is it a fight worth doing. If I just accepted who I am I might be happier over time. Avoid the haunt because it bothers my senses, find another job that removes me from the public, etc., I'd feel as if though I would create an Us and them situation, aspie vs. neurotypical. Also, the easy route is often not the best route. I feel fighting is the best route.

Comments

Doctors often are wrong when it comes to saying what an individual can or can't do. I commend your attitude.

Have you heard of the book "The Woman Who Changed Her Brain" by Barbara Arrowsmith-Young? She was a woman with severe learning disabilities who was also told that she couldn't amount to much either. Incredibly, she went on to college where she encountered the writings of the Russian neuroscientist Luria and that changed her whole life. Inspired by his work she devised a series of mental exercises for herself to retrain (not compensate) her brain. She went on to found the Arrowsmith School which has helped many individuals with cognitive difficulties. It's an amazing story, from a woman who would not take "no" for an answer.
 
I agree with SpinningCompass' remarks.

As for having to don make-up as a haunted house occupant, this is a role comparatively few NTs ever find themselves in. There's a broad range to the term 'normal life' which is good news. It means you get to select from many options & even create your own. While you may have a fear & an aversion to the make-up, noise & lighting, I'd say that it is not a true phobia or pleasing someone else would hardly be a sufficient motivation to expose yourself to these things & live with the sheer blind terror that grips the truly phobic.

Part of why not being NT may be so unpleasant for you is that you've spent your lifetime in drag trying to conform to & ape behaviours, speech patterns & values you may only partially espouse. I too lived in NT drag full time for what seemed like aeons. What helped was establishing a truce with myself. I get to be who I am since, ultimately, that is the only person I can ever successfully & happily be. When absolutely necessary, I will get into character as a NT but only for brief periods. This compromise has allowed me to achieve much more balance between the demands of the overbearing NT world & the realities of who & what I am.
 

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sixpakal
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2 min read
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