I’ve been using a pseudonym on…pretty much the whole internet for a while. It hasn’t been a very good pseudonym, mind, and I haven’t been very protective of keeping my non-informed internet friends unaware of my real name. I wasn’t sure if I wanted my real first name associated with autism and neurodiversity (because, really, how many other people named Ali could there be in the world? Oh? Probably, like, 78400, give or take, in the US alone, between Ali and Alison, men and women? Oh. Shit.). Fine, you see through my flimsy excuse. I really just wanted to have a more awesome surname than what I currently have.
So if you’ve come here by way of an autism related blog, you may be momentarily befuddled by my name choice. This is the real deal. That other thing? It’s not so much. I’m going to shift to using my real name everywhere, but it’ll take time, and regular commenting, two things I’m not so stellar with. Also, ending sentences with prepositions.
So, I’ve had this here blog thing less than a week, and my mom found it. I’m not sure if she’s still reading it, or if it was a one-time read-through, revlusion/horror/sadness sort of deal, because I haven’t posted since she told me–for fuck’s sake, I’d barely had a chance to make a dent in my own bandwidth yet anyway. (Though I have gotten spammed. Twice.)
The funny thing is, I was brainstorming a post on how to approach her on the subject–my last few attempts have been rebuffed, so I wasn’t feeling so great about it–of Asperger’s, and me, and my seeing a professional. I was even considering a series of posts about the process of coming out aspie, and how it’s similar, and not, to coming out queer (something I have experience with already), and how other adults on the spectrum I admire have handled it.
This is not the first time my mom has found me on the intarwebs, nor is it the first time I’ve felt mildly violated by her actions; when pressed to tell me how she finds me, she hasn’t ever given a satisfactory answer, and claims she just likes to know what I’m up to. For a while, I left comments directed TO her in posts I made on various Gawker Media sites (mostly Jez), knowing she might be lurking and reading, and knowing she knew this made me profoundly uncomfortable. I was under the impression that this had ended after she yelled at me a few months ago for “saying mean things about her on the internet” (which, I’m sorry to say, is the perogative of all children with internet access), and my telling her to back off. However, one of the only places I can think of that she might have gotten this link would be my profile on any of the Gawker Media sites, which means she’s still checking up on me. I am trying not to be upset over that part, because she has said that she is hurt that I didn’t tell her, feels shut out, and feels like I might blame her for all of this.
So. I know my mom, and I know now, for sure, that she probably would not stop reading even if I explicitly asked her not to–and I haven’t, yet. I must assume that she is reading.
Asperger’s syndrome is a neurological disorder; it is probably genetic (there are a ton of genes that are potentially causal for any given person, and they may be de novo or inherited mutations) with some posssibility of influence from outside sources like the uterine environment; it is non-degenerative. It is currently diagnosed at a rate of 10 boys to every 1 girl, while there are 4 boys for every 1 girl diagnosed across the whole autism spectrum; this is, in my opinion, probably due to girls with Asperger’s being capable enough of masking their symptoms that they never seek out help or are brought in for help by their parents (girls are socialized towards many aspie traits–introversion in a teenage girl may be less worrying than in a teenage boy–and their interests are often more socially normative, even if the intensity is not). With support from family and friends, there is no reason a person with Asperger’s can’t have the same sort of achievements anyone else can–if that’s what he or she wants. My goals have not changed: I still intend to do my premeds, go to med school, and have kids.
By my own assessment, and the agreement of the therapist, I am a very borderline case. There is a grey area where the most socially functional persons on the autism spectrum meet the least socially functional persons NOT on the spectrum, where a diagnosis is very difficult to make. Ultimately, though, I know me better than anyone else (actually, Kit may know me just as well), and I appreciate her trust in my confidence on which side of the line I fall. It was a difficult conclusion, the work of 2 years of personal searching, to make, and meant a lot to me to be trusted, as the first therapist I saw for this very much did not trust me.
My goals are the same, it’s not degenerative, it’s an extremely mild case…why did I seek out confirmation, then? Because I want access to support groups, although currently the closest one that isn’t for parents of little kids is in Richmond. Because I enjoy being told I’m right, a feeling my mother should be intimately familiar with. Because I want help with my preference for nothing changing, and to get therapy paid for by insurance means having some sort of diagnosis on my paperwork–and if it’s going to be A diagnosis, I want it to be the RIGHT one.
To start, it is Prosper’s 3 month birthday according to my totally arbitrary date I gave him by counting down from how old the shelter thought he was when I adopted him and then fudging the number a bit so his birthday coincides with the date most commonly celebrated as Shakespeare’s birthday. The kitten doesn’t speak a lot of English yet–mostly his name–but I guess he knew something was up when he got two new toys (a kitten version of a kong, a dog chewing toy, which I’m hoping will save my arms from further destruction, and one of his jingle toys tied with elastic to the underside of my loft bed) last night, and a few treats for no good reason this morning. The elastic toy is really helping his jumping skills, of which he has none.
The idea for the toys came after I had my first meeting with my new therapist yesterday afternoon, a meeting that went so well I ended up spending far more money on my kitten than I had really intended to because I was still pleasantly letting the few words we’d said tumble about my head.
I hadn’t expected something quite along those lines, after nearly two months of struggling with a psychologist who was not a good fit. I came in to him alone, sad, frustrated, knowing full well that I have Asperger’s syndrome and wanting confirmation and someone to help me come up with coping strategies, to help me become less defeatist and self-isolating, to help me stop making patterns in my friends’ interactions with me that aren’t true. I was coming from a perspective of neurodiversity, and with some perspective I think he was coming from the view that any ASD is inherently disabling. The patients he normally saw with Asperger’s, from comments he had made, must be men more profoundly affected than I, and while it may not be fair, I’m not certain that either intellectual curiosity or professionalism had ever prompted him to ever pick up even the simplest Attwood book for assistance; he expected my behaviours and, later, test scores to match these men, and while they might have a similar pattern, I’m a 24 year old woman, extremely intelligent, who self-diagnosed because my masking skills are good enough to have escaped evaluation previously. He didn’t want to give me a diagnosis of Asperger’s as he felt it would limit me; I felt it could only help me grow. We could not see eye to eye–I was, in fact, so frustrated with him I could not make eye contact at all. We did not part on good terms and I cried with Kitty for a while in the car.
The reccomendation for this new therapist came from the old, which put me on edge, but I had liked him as a person, just not his ideas or attitude. She was kind, polite, and read my written summary of myself and why I was there–I so greatly prefer written words to spoken ones I had prepared a five page document, including the DSM criteria for Asperger’s and how I fit them–while I filled out the forms I needed to do for her, answering questions as best I could whenever they came up.
It was the first therapy session I can remember having that I enjoyed. I think I probably enjoyed the ones I had as a small child, playing with toys while being reassured that some change was necessary, like the birth of my brother, but I can’t recall those with any clarity. So it is with great relief that I have found this lady, even if I must drive half an hour each way to see her, and I will see her again next Tuesday.
One of the last things she said to me, which has been on an echolalic repeat in my head–and mouth, sometimes spilling over into the air–was so calming, so reassuring, perhaps what many an adult aspie looking for a diagnosis and some help needs to hear I shall repeat it here: “This is just amazing, that you’ve compiled all this together, done all of this research, and self-diagnosed like this. I’ve never seen anything like it before, and I’m glad to be the person to help you however you need.”
Addendum: Things I have learned today:
1. Prosper does not read open letters on the internet.
a. He has added “my eyesockets” to the list of great places to sleep.
b. When he chews on your arm, if he gets a raised mole, it will look really awful after the fact.
2. Prosper really likes strawberry milkis.
3. There are new photos added to my flickr set, available here.
Dear Prosper,
I am aware that you think there are three appropriate things for you to do while I am sleeping. These are, 1. chew on any part of me, especially arms or hair, which you can get a hold of, out of spite for missing Kit; 2. sleep on top of my trachea; and 3. sleep sweetly curled next to my pillow. Please be advised that only 3 is appropriate and it is why you keep being removed from my person with loud ‘No!’s, not because I am a Mean Mommy.
Much love,
Your mean kitten mommy
It would be inappropriate to see how long I can keep up Kate Miller-Heidke song lyrics for subjects that are mildly relevant to the posts at hand, but I have a feeling that will be in the spirit of this blog. Inaugural post ahoy.
This will show as published July 20th, but for me it’s still the 19th because I’m at work and when one works 3rd shift, for the sake of brains one must have some semblance of a regular day. I’m afraid I won’t be able to say much more about where I work, specifically, in the interests of not getting dooced, but third shift sucks and am looking for other work. Do you want to give me a job? Yes? Good. Please to be hiring me.
Yes. Anyway, digression monster, it’s the 19th and that means that Kitty left today. Got an email from Mom asking how I’m doing. The answer is, um, not so awesome. It’s been a pretty shitty week altogether, and we were both snotty because we knew it was going to end in a plane soon and we both hate that, so there was a lot of unnecessary bickering that I profoundly regret. I had a bad doctor appointment that I’m not quite ready to discuss on teh intarwebs just yet–still processing, need visualizations–and Prosper is getting very, very big. And very, very teething, as the Hello Kitty bandaid on my arm can attest (he was pissed off that I was gone all day driving to and from DC/the airport and returned without one of his humans).
I promised Kit Iwould blog, and so I shall. The intention is that this blog will be semi-personal, with commentary and trackbacks to articles and posts I find interesting on other posts from blogs I frequent. We’ll see how this experiment turns out.
My name is Ali, though sometimes it's Eliot.
I have many tumblrs, which you are welcome to also visit:
The Polite Yeti - My personal tumblr, full of silliness.
Fuck Yeah, Kate Miller-Heidke - the only active Kate fan site, which is baffling.
The Branden Rose - the only active Monster Blood Tattoo fansite, which is less baffling.
I also have a semi-successful etsy shop, which you should visit, below.
Please buy things from me:
A brief history: