On the Inside
Well-Known Member
That's awesome.People with a disability should try harder… To not let other people try to define your life for you
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That's awesome.People with a disability should try harder… To not let other people try to define your life for you
Many people, it seems, simply refuse to put themselves out to change their opinions for anything, for no rational reason, just that they want the world to work according to them.
This is how my ex-wife has always been with me, even after being apart for 5 years and with formal recognition, if not yet a diagnosis, of AS and severe depression for the last two years.
No matter how bad I am, no matter that I might not be coping at all at any time, she still insists I have my kids all of my allotted time and more.. she wanted a break from them over the two week Easter half term, so I've had them for 10 days so far, with another week to go.. and that's a common issue - Christmas was terrible!
Now I'm always glad to have my boys but lately, since my breakdown, I've found myself much less able to manage than I was before and now have to leave them to it quite often while I either hide in bed or here on AC.
My concern is that they're stressed and anxious when they see me shutting down and there's nothing I can do to make things better or alleviate their worry.
Also, I feel a phenomenal amount of guilt for being how I am, that I'm being unreasonable and should be able to set my problems aside and cope!
I'm constantly made to feel that my difference is the problem..
I am late arriving on this thread mostly because I had to think long and hard on it. The original post raised a whole lot of stuff that I hadn't looked at it a long while, and also brought to question the 'how' of answering it.
Firstly, I do not regard myself as 'disabled', but that in itself needs expansion. In '57 I became one of the many unfortunates who was stricken with polio in the last epidemic we had in the UK. Polio itself is not one single disease, I suffered from what later become known as 'vaccine-associated paralytic poliomyelitis', a form of polio that was caused by the actual vaccine. It caused an intitial total paralysis that in many others resulted in type 1 polio morbidity i.e. death. Luckily for me, it didn't kill me, but did leave me severely disabled and in a wheelchair.
Obviously, at this point, I was disabled, no one was going to disagree with that 'label' at that time. My parents were told that the damage to my muscles was irreversable and science had nothing to offer. What science didn't appreciate were my parents, an aspie mother who would have risen in the ranks of the SS given half the chance, and a Tibetan father who saw my illness as a punishment on him for his sins.
The result?
I was walking with the help of leg irons in six months. I still remember that time, and it wasn't pretty, but they pushed me beyond the thing that disabled me and in the process, laid down a format in me that still exists today. I also remember the consultants face as he saw me walk into his office in leg irons, his only answer was "Well, he'll never play sports". Shame he didn't live long enough to see me play rugby for my county, become captain of the ice hockey team or trial for the Olympics in swimming.
The polio never went away, I still have it, the virus is known to lie dormant in the spine and can recur as 'post polio syndrome' in 70% of survivors. To this day I am 'missing' a quad in my left leg, which is also shorter than the right. I also have nerve insensitivity through the left side of my body but the only visual evidence is that my smile is slightly crooked. No one today would refer to me as disabled, even though I was clinically and physically disabled to begin with.
Polio was a gift that kept giving, leaving me with a variant of chronic obstructive pulmonary disorder, asthma, chronic ideopathic urticaria and emphysema. My current doctor tells me that any of these can get me labelled as 'disabled' if I didn't appear to be so healthy, which made me think that the term is, apparently, relative.
The fact is, I never let any of it beat me, and if you met me you would never know my journey. My parents, without knowing, instilled within me the basis of this quote -
"Success is not built on success. It's built on failure. It's built on frustration. Sometimes it's built on catastrophe" ~ Sumner Murray Redstone.
Throughout that entire journey lurked my Aspergers, unknown at that time it wouldn't come into existence as a 'known' syndrome until I was in my thirties. By that time I could not get a medical diagnosis of being disabled even though my medical records stated I was previously. At no point did any medical person ever put forward that I was disabled in any other way.
Roll forward and suddenly the way I process information and react to it is seen as a disability. I will never accept that diagnosis nor will I ever use it as an excuse to not achieve my goals.
Did I try harder?
I guess I did, so I'll leave you with this.
"You are capable of more than you know. Choose a goal that seems right for you and strive to be the best, however hard the path. Aim high. Behave honorably. Prepare to be alone at times, and to endure failure. Persist! The world needs all you can give." ~ E. O. Wilson
The fact is, I never let any of it beat me, and if you met me you would never know my journey.
I don't like the whole "Asperger's as an excuse" thing, because one person's excuse is another person's legitimate reason. Some Aspies may indeed use their AS as an excuse if they are inhabiting their diagnosis unduly, but I don't think that's the case with you or you more likely wouldn't have posted your question. Aspies "try harder" every day, because we're pressured to meet the expectations of NTs. An NT partner needs to understand this. What looks to them like mediocre effort is often a considerable one already. This isn't playing into the "disability" issue, it's about value-neutral differences in ways of thinking and behaving.
/QUOTE]
Well, this was coincidental.
I will not accept the verdict that I am using a diagnosis of Asperger's as an excuse.
but for the most part what I see as a downward spiral is actually me not keeping up with my peers.
I had looked back on that with a sense of time wasted, but I am trying to forgive my "failures" and work to incorporate those former strengths into my present in some way. Those things made me happy when I wasn't putting pressure on myself to make it pay off.