Showing posts with label being present. Show all posts
Showing posts with label being present. Show all posts

Tuesday, 11 August 2020

The Oldways

 If I wasn't already known as the village crazy lady then walking barefoot down the street stroking my hand with the fronds of a fabulous piece of reed should have done it!

This walk was long overdue and as soon as I left the house my feet let me know they wanted to be on the ground, not the flip flops I had put them in. I ignored them for the duration of the appointment I had gone out for, but as soon as it was over I had to let them be free. 

My feet found so many wonderful treats and treasures for me and led me to where I needed to be. 















Long grass, short grass, cool grass, warm grass. Hot hard tarmac. Smooth paving. Earth baked dry and earth with a spring. Soft dirt, spiky stones. Bark that wakes up each millimetre of forgotten sole.

Insects buzzing, breeze in the trees, pigeons beating the air with their wings. Doves cooing, tiny popping as water evaporates under the sun from the drying stream, and the odd drip from the grasses growing into the water. A distant pheasant. Butterflies dancing. Songbirds chattering. And me, finally still. Sitting, silent. Breeze stroking my skin in the warm shadow. Bare feet, breathing the life around me, being part of this place in this moment.

Friday, 24 July 2020

Whisper


Whistles and shrill squeals awaken the evening air as the swifts soar and arc across the sky in their infinite playground of freedom. They have brought me peace and joy in summers gone by, but I said goodbye to those days as they were followed by dark, dark ones and it became too painful to remember the rising promise of life when it had since been dashed so thoroughly.

And yet tonight the warm breeze that gently stirs the birch leaves brushes my skin with the softness, security and familiarity of a well-loved blanket, delivering the faintest glimmer of what I thought was lost to me: forbidden, abandoned hope. It's gentle enough to be permissible - it slides in, the tiniest of feelings, barely noticeable so as not to alert the beast within to its presence, and yet I know it has visited me.

Hope is painful, it brings uncertainty and the possibility of crushing, destroying disappointment. These things I cannot bear and so by habit I squash hope. I box it up for when I'm sure - it's lovely to know it's there but I can't bear to touch it. But this hope stole quietly up to me and stroked me on the cheek, not overpowering with its presence but simply passing by just to let me know it was there. It didn't need me to take it captive, it will come again when I'm ready for it, and I will learn one day to dance with hope.

Sunday, 13 January 2019

Having a "me"

I've been wanting to write this post for a while, but I'm not entirely certain of what I want to say, so please bear with me!

It's a post about being a "me": existing as a person or specific entity present in the world of other specific entities. This is something that most people probably take for granted most of the time, but a truth that I have often struggled to accept, or done my best to ignore, consciously or otherwise.

Even as a child I could not bear being conspicuous. Reading aloud at school was terrifying even though I was an advanced reader, being picked on to answer a question (because I NEVER volunteered) was my worst nightmare, having my music practice observed (just the presence of another person in the room, or even the house) made me angry and fearful and even the acknowledgment of my having completed some action or made some choice made me at the least uncomfortable. I sometimes find it intrusive when people use my name. When I'm really stressed out and can't have the control or invisibility I need, I have recently realised I just disappear. My body is there, doing what has to be done, but I'm not really in it - I have relinquished all choice, feeling, control, and thereby, "me", because to try and maintain a part of it or be present while lacking those things is too painful.

I always knew I was different from other people and that other people often knew this too, and being different is generally experienced as being wrong. I learnt to fit in well enough to avoid being a complete social outcast, but for many years I was very much clinging on to the perimeter of inclusion with people who were hardly the embodiment of "accepted" themselves. My goal in life was to go unnoticed.

All this is hardly news to me, and I am fairly sure that it has been a conscious goal through childhood and adulthood. When I received my diagnosis of autism I finally had a "reason" for why I was different and as I had grown older I had found a small number of friends who I truly fit in with. I had the longed-for acceptance and belonging and an explanation of why it had always been so difficult.

How wonderful to go unseen
Yet I retained this need to be invisible. As I worked through therapy recently I was aware that this was one of the functions of my mental health disorder. It was driven by a desire to be entirely insignificant, unnoticeable and to the outside world non-existent. That way you can't cause any problems, you can't be at fault or fail, and you don't hurt. Of course this is nonsense, and I did all of those things a thousand times more because of my condition, but those were the beguiling promises it made me.

Through therapy I have been trying to entertain the idea of a "me" being allowed to exist. Complete with potential for pain for others and myself and inevitable imperfection. I often find it difficult even to write or speak in the first person (even as this is written!), but I am gradually beginning to tolerate the existence of my emotions and to accept what I do or don't do, whether it is what I was aiming for or not. And then to show compassion to that "me" that has been allowed to exist. (It turns out my psychologist wasn't lying when she suggested that accepting things I don't like about myself might help them to gradually be needed less. Counterintuitive propaganda I thought, but there is definitely something in the whole acceptance, compassion, nurturing thing. I hate it!)

My battle with this idea really struck me after I read a post on social media over the New Year period. It stated that "Your wellbeing should be your number one priority. Nothing else is more important." I turned this thought around and around in my head and couldn't make sense of it. Something was wrong with it: it didn't seem to add up. I couldn't work out if it was supposed to be true or not, so I consulted Mr Peggy. He seemed to think that ultimately it probably is true. I'm still not sure (discussion welcome!), but it really made me aware that I still have a strong resistance to considering such a high value on my wellbeing even though I have changed a lot.

Then I began reading a book on "Exposure Anxiety" and my goodness, it resonates in places (I've only got to about page 30 of 300-and-something!). It was mentioned in the afterword of Donna Williams' Somebody Somewhere (second of two autobiographical accounts of Williams' life with autism and her journey from "her world" into "the world") and sounded interesting, so I popped it on my Christmas list and have begun to read avidly.

We disappear at any hint of discovery
Williams defines Exposure Anxiety as "an involuntary social-emotional self-protection response that is increasingly understood as a crippling condition affecting a high proportion of people on the autism spectrum." "Exposure anxiety makes it difficult to dare 'expressive volume' in a directly-confrontational (self-in-relation-to-other) world." "Exposure anxiety is about feeling your own existence too close up, too in your own face." (Williams, D. Exposure Anxiety, The Invisible Cage 2003, 10-11.) It produces aversion, diversion and retaliation responses and can present in many ways, just as each individual with autism is different, but can include difficulties in making decisions, fulfilling needs, being unable to perform under observation tasks which are well within an individual's skill set, speaking through other people's words (echolalia), being very controlled or controlling, and a myriad of other issues.

It has nothing to do with Exposure Therapy used to treat various mental illnesses, and I'm not sure that it is a widely-acknowledged "thing", but I think it can be a useful way of understanding aspects of behaviour in some autistic people, and the suggestions given for supporting such people certainly have merit. I see a large overlap with Pathological Demand Avoidance (PDA): though perhaps a difference in motivation, the mechanisms and presentation can be similar and helpful responses may look alike.

Perhaps I will write a separate post once I have finished the book, but I found it an interesting concept given my musings on why I find it so difficult to have a "me." (Which I still want to call a "you" because that is much less uncomfortable!)

So here's to "me." Me is a bit intermittent and only appears when she can face it, but we're seeing more of her as time goes on. Just don't tell her if you see her - she'll probably evaporate into thin air!


PS. You can probably tell her afterwards, when it's over because then it's less intense