PDA, ADHD, Bipolar lived experience

  • Neurodiversity Acceptance Month

    As shown here: https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=674917597975147&set=pcb.675005351299705, the topic of week one is ‘Autism Advocacy’.

    I suppose by writing this blog, my aim is to contribute towards the wealth of autism advocacy available on social media. In particular, I wanted to add to the adult PDAer voice, as most of the PDA work online is by parents for parents. That’s an important perspective, but late diagnosed PDAers need resources too, and we deserve for our voices to be heard.

    Autism advocacy was so important for me learning about my own neurotypes. I was manically hyperfixating on all things neurodivergent for around 6 months before ending up in hospital, which I think contributed to experiencing burn out at the same time and losing my speech for around a month and a half.

    Something I found difficult was that April was early on in my journey, and that month reminded me all the ways my Autistic traits have lead to oppression and trauma. Even just the counter-responses by Autistic advocates in that month was unpleasant. So I’m trying to work to make April a more pleasant experience now, and engage in these blogging events to share a rounded Autistic experience, without directly engaging in the stuff that fights back against Autism Speaks etc.

    Outside of that aspect of Autism advocacy though, I’m so glad for the #actuallyautistic communties on the web, and the people discussing ADHD. I’d never have understood the nature of these neurotypes well enough to realise it was my experience without it. It also helped me feel like there were people out there that understood me, all of me for the first time (particularly meeting fellow PDAers).

    I think it’s actually a really impressive lived experience body of knowledge that is being created, and it deserves to be valued as much as research studies – that are often dehumanising, and from the Allistic perspective, rather than our own. It’s important that we listen to Autistic people about our own lives, what works for us, and what we find traumatising. Autistic adults are best placed to say what will help Autistic children, having lived through that experience.

  • April

    Thanks to ‘autism awareness month’ this is easily one of my least favourite times of the year. It has previously served as a reminder of all the ways that the world is unaccepting, if not hostile to Autistics.

    So this year, I’m going to refer to Autism Pride.

    I’ll also be partaking in this https://www.facebook.com/autisticpartygiraffe/posts/pfbid05oq5XPjkZbC6eXo6WjoXfPgodrs1cNTNuUDfiookRBDEVeMWuukbkK3WDP1vBodol on my blog, and https://www.instagram.com/p/CqYuAYThm2O/ on the associated facebook page.

  • A Kind Of Spark

    This is a couple of days late, but I was lucky enough to catch the BBC interview of the author of A Kind of Spark, and the three lead actors from the series.

    If you haven’t heard of this yet, it’s an Autistic series. The author, Ellie McNicoll is #ActuallyAutistic, as were the three actors playing the lead characters. It was really quite something to see four women sitting on BBC Breakfast discussing masking, and the difficulties of getting diagnosed as women on the spectrum.

    I’m really looking forward to watching this series, which will be on CBBC and Iplayer for those in the UK.

  • High demand capacity

    I’m having a rare day of low demand anxiety/high demand capacity. Seems slightly odd after the demand that I fix the ways I didn’t meet standards in a room inspection within three days – it has to be said yesterday that made me extremely anxious and tanked my mood.

    I guess a good 17 hour sleep was exactly what I needed in that state, after being awake for 28 hours (fairly common for me). It seems to have restored things, and I can make sense of why the things need to be done, so that helps with the demand anxiety. It also helped that when I wrote out the tasks involved, it was less than I had estimated. Also, a local autism charity offered support to get the more difficult tasks done, after I called them for support in the anxious, dysphoric state.

    What’s been really awesome though, is that I’ve had capacity for hobbies. So far today I’ve knitted a little, played a solo TTRPG called Ironsworn, and played a board game with a friend and staff at the supported housing. After writing this post, I’m going to pick back up a book I haven’t touched in over a month.

    Days like this are rare, and very treasured when they occur.

  • Feelwheel

    Just wanted to highlight a rather cool tool for dealing with alexithymia:

    The feel wheel. Start in the centre, with the 5 core emotions, and work outwards to a more specific emotion word that ‘fits’ how you feel.

    https://feelingswheel.com/

    Nearly every time I want to work out how I’m feeling, I use this to do so.

  • (untitled)

    Fancied a change up, so a change of blog theme. That’ll probably happen every once in a while.

  • Life is boring..

    .. life feels boring?

    Is life boring?

    It definitely feels it recently. Life has been feeling same-y, repetitive, lacking anything truly pleasurable, or worthwhile.

    I’ve also been sleeping a lot – regular 12+ sleeps, with very low demand capacity, struggling to cook, or want much food.

    Sounds like mild depression to me.

    So maybe life isn’t boring, but depression is making it seem that way. That’s what I’m hoping, because if that’s the case, there’s tangible things I can do about it.

    Though, part of me suspects that it’s also that human society is badly set up.. if you want to get out of the house and do something, what can you do?

    Shop? spend money you don’t have on things you don’t need

    Cafe? Park? Library? Cinema? It’s a limited range of options.

    OR

    There’s go down a pub… and we wonder why drinking is so common in society.

    It’s hard to think what there is to plan to go out and do with my time, that could be some spontaneous fun. I think that’s part of what I’m lacking, something different, out of the ordinary, spur of the moment… but it’s so hard to think what that could look like.

    All the options just feel like another part of the mundanity.

    I don’t know if depression is the reason that mundanity feels so oppressively unbearable, or not. If it’s not, I don’t know what to do about that feeling.

    But working on making sure I’m looking after my mood sounds like a place to start, and nothing has to be fixed all at once. It’s a journey… and yesteday (I write this at 3am), getting some sunshine, spending time with friends … and making plans with a local healthwatch* to do work around Autistic and learning disabled people stuck in prisons and ATUs was definitely a step along that journey. Definitely feels like a bigger step than the previous day which was made up of lonely sleeping and dozing (that horrible half asleep state where you want to just pop downstairs and see people you no longer live with). But I try to remember the value of rest, and perhaps that day of doziness was just as important and restorative – and prepared me for the day I had yesterday.

    *If you’re in the UK, you can find your local healthwatch here.

  • (untitled)

    Gonna link to this twitter thread; https://twitter.com/Autist_Writer/status/1638996227286093824 because it sums up all the feelings I have about Untypical that I struggled to express.

    Words are not proving easy at the moment. Not to the point of being completely mute, but not infrequently expressing myself proves tricky or harder than I can manage. There’s also a general sense of ‘No.’ from my brain about nearly everything, and a lingering sense of ‘life is really, really boring’.

    Hopefully this will pass in time.

  • Untypical, by Pete Wharmby

    When I was discovering my neurodevelopmental differences (I don’t say neurodivergences, as I include bipolar in that, which I already know about), I started processing all the trauma that was associated with them. It left me with the feeling that neurotypical society was deeply hostile towards neurodivergents, particularly Autistics.

    So I knew I wanted to read the recent release based on the tagline alone: “How the world isn’t built for Autistic people, and what we should all do about it”. It promised acknowledgement and validation, and that’s exactly what the book delivers. It also offered a sense of hope, that there’s things that can be done, that this hostility isn’t unavoidable.

    My brain isn’t braining very well recently, so it’s hard to find the words to express everything I feel about this book, but I heartily recommend it!

  • Exercise update

    A couple of times now, I’ve had a little tiny urge to try out some gentle yoga. Acted on it tonight, which feels like a little bit of progress.

    Unfortunately, I learnt that my 30 something year old. spinal fused body finds kneeling, laying, and adopting various positions on the floor rather painful, which is utterly motivation killing. It’s a shame, because gentle, slow yoga feels like the ideal not-overly demanding exercise that’d work for me at the moment. I’m not even sure what I could do to make it less painful, I already have an extra thick mat for padding.

    Maybe something like tai chi would be ideal, again nice and slow, but mostly standing. I ought to find time to get back into swimming as well, haven’t been in a long time and I have plenty of free time. Not that ‘ought to’ is the right approach as a PDAer.