Tag: neurodivergence

  • Working with my brain, not against.

    The first benefit of discovering PDA and realising it applied to me was finding I could finally work “with” my brain. Meaning I could approach life in a way that didn’t leave me fighting with myself every step of the way. Dissociating from demand anxiety. Beginning to learn not to fawn (still working on this). Advocating for myself. Taking demand free time.

    This is true for my other neurodivergences as well (neurodevelopmental or otherwise).

    With dyspraxia, I find it easier to make progress on a craft when I work on a repetitive project. In knitting that was my blanket squares, in crochet it’s doing rows of double crochet that will eventually become an infinity scarf. (See my latest instagram post!) This drills the basic steps into my procedural memory (“muscle memory”). I also try to only learn one new stitch at a time with new projects, or maybe just one new skill – like a joining technique.

    I also focus on physical activity I find easier to coordinate. I don’t worry about team sports where I tend to let the team down. In fact, I don’t tend to bother with competitive sport at all.

    With dyscalculia, long before my diagnosis (but well after my suspicions), I learnt stats procedures “in words”. That is, I learnt the concepts in verbal form, rather than running the formulas over and over. This isn’t as easy to apply to numeracy (it’s hard to write out the concepts of the procedure for calculating a percentage I find.) It helped that Cardiff University taught the procedural concepts thoroughly. This meant I was able to verbalise the steps of a formula, rather than just being given the procedure as formulas. I probably need to practice looking at a formula and breaking it down into it’s constituent verbal concepts.

    With ADHD, it’s things like K.C. Davis’s “five things cleaning”. I struggle to sequence my actions, and approaches like this finally make it possible for me to tidy my room. It can also mean making sure I get more physical activity as this slows down my mind.

    When it comes to bipolar, it’s about working to get enough sleep. Taking meds religiously. Watching for warning signs.. but also keeping enough factors that promote well-being in your life.

    It’s also about meeting your sensory needs. I now know I find visual input very over-stimulating for example. So I wear sunglasses on sunny days. I go to smaller supermarkets where there’s fewer products and aisles. I allow myself to eat in a way that meets my sensory needs and don’t apologise for it.

    And on top of that, it’s allowing myself to stim and fidget. I was forever told to “sit still”, “stop fidgeting” as a kid. Now I know it’s a neurological need, and I meet it.

    Knowing you’re neurodivergent really is more than half the battle.

  • Being PDA in an allistic world

    It’s a hard existence for sure! I’m sure many PDAers born in the 80s and 90s can relate to the experience of growing up misunderstood by everybody. Parents, teachers, nearly every adult we interacted with took our avoidance and demand anxiety for defiance. I know I was met with harsh treatment (and worse) to gain compliance, and I still very frequently struggle to feel safe enough to do anything but fawn.

    Many allistic people view avoidance of a “reasonable” request as defiance, entitlement and/or laziness. They don’t see any other explanation. This seems to be likely, to me, be due to there not being any other reason to not engage in communally orientated behaviours (i.e. complying) for allistic people. That’s just my perception, based on living around them though. Even though many people feel that they don’t like being told what to do, it’s still felt that not doing so is just defiance. They struggle to comprehend going beyond mere dislike, to severe paralysing anxiety that prevents action.

    As a result, many resort to strategies and approaches that just make things worse. I’d hope most don’t resort to violence, intimidation and humiliation – but I certainly know these things can happen to PDA children! I often feel that everyone has something they will use some level of force to obtain compliance and this leaves me feeling very scared at times.

    I really wish I could find more people willing to use a PDA friendly approach. It’d include gentler language, such as declarative phrasing. Challenging hierarchy and “have tos”, allowing for flexibility and collaboration, and respecting my need for demand free time.

    In the meantime, there’s work for me to do in supporting myself, regardless of anyone else’s attitude. I could learn to use gentler phrasing with myself – I still often say “I should/I need to”. I would greatly benefit from feeling more able to set boundaries around my willingness to comply. I am at least becoming stronger at self-advocacy, for example, creating the PDA flipbook to help professionals understand me.

    Something I’d really like for the future is to find more neurokin to connect with. I really enjoy interacting with PDAers, it makes me feel like I “make sense”.

  • Sometimes, spontaneity helps

    Just now I was trying to motivate myself to brush my teeth tonight as well as this morning. I really need to try and meet this demand more to protect my teeth and gums. I have gum disease with a lot of recession and wobbly teeth. Of course, the importance ups the level of demand.

    What worked tonight was to acknowledge my resistance and to back off on the pressure. I engaged in other tasks, like unsubscribing to email lists I no longer need. I accepted I may not be able to do this task, no matter how important.

    After a little while, I found myself spontaneously standing up, and heading to the bathroom. No thought, such as ‘let’s go brush my teeth’ preceded this. I just stood up, ready to undertake the action.

    I’ve found this at other times as well, on occasion. It doesn’t always work, but sometimes, allowing spontaneity in action shifts avoidance.

  • An important article

    Sally Cat’s piece fully articulates all my thinking on why PDA may not be autism at all.

    It very much does seem shoehorned into autism after the removal of PDD-NOS. This was an attempt to remove different types of autism, and now we are left with a “subtype”, that doesn’t have a true diagnostic home.

    It’s a frustrating home, and one I hope we can build enough research for to resolve for the next editions of the DSM and ICD.

  • The delicate balance

    Recently I’ve been neglecting to make use of the tricks I practiced whilst living in supported housing. Things like “just do five minutes”, using a visual timer, “just prepping”.. I’ve not been using them.

    In part because having carers takes some of the load from me – I can use them to get things done where avoidance makes things difficult. Unfortunately though, this does not foster independence in the long run, and may set me back if I become reliant on this.

    Tonight, I said to myself ‘just wash up five things’ and I ended up nearly clearing all my dirty dishes. I let myself do a half-assed job, knowing that any job worth doing is worth half-assing. That relieved the pressure of demand anxiety, which had been preventing me from a number of tasks recently.

    I have a laundry pile that’s unwieldy. I couldn’t shower yesterday. Days went by with no dishwashing. I still haven’t changed the bedsheets.

    It’s all about making little tiny steps forward. Not pushing too hard, and respecting my PDA for protecting me. Protecting me from overwhelm, burnout, chores themselves. Gently easing into care tasks, and being gentle with my bodymind as it resists and then finds a way to proceed.

    Life with PDA is a delicate balance, it seems.

  • The “On a narrowboat with no internet signal” game

    Inspired by an episode of Canal Boat Diaries I’d watched (gotta love comfy, gentle tv), where the star, Robbie Cummings found himself at a remote mooring. He experienced the situation as a blessing, inspiring him to undertake routine maintenance and get necessary tasks done.

    This gave me the idea for a little game. I could be on my own little narrowboat of the imagination. At 4am (my sleeping pattern is ever wonky), I turned the internet off and put on my favourite early breakfast show – shout out to Owain Wyn Evans!

    And then I started tackling some household tasks I had been quietly avoiding. Some of them I’d been quietly relying on my carers to just about keep on top of them. Others had just been ignored for weeks.

    Now I have washed up dishes, brushed teeth, shaved legs, and a tidied dining table and desk!

    Sometimes gamification and novelty really shifts the demand anxiety to a place back to where autonomy feels present.

  • Update

    Recently I’ve noticed myself fawning more again. It feels like the only way that people will accept me, that overt demand avoidance is met only with rejection, judgement, and attempts at gaining compliance.

    I don’t like the experience of fawning. It’s a situation of taking my demand anxiety and shoving it deep inside to where I can no longer feel it , and going against my own nature to meet another person’s desires. It leaves me doubting whether I am actually PDA, if I am able to be so compliant.

    But then, I still need carers to help me manage day to day activities. I avoid getting out of bed, or going to bed. I still only shower every other day, because daily is a demand too far.

    Sometimes my PDA is less obvious for a stretch at a time – PDA is a fluctuating disability where capacity varies. No doubt times will change, and I’ll notice my demand anxiety more at some point in the near future.

  • PDAfae discord

    I’m working on creating a PDAfae discord for those who would like a place to socialise with fellow PDAers/parents of PDAers.

    Overtime I will need some moderators to support this effort, please feel free to email me at PDAfaeATgmail.com (replace the AT with an @) to discuss this.

    I will also be sharing this on facebook, and in facebook groups, and instagram.

  • Self-acceptance

    A little while back Comfortandkindness shared this post on Instagram, talking about the difference between many books on ADHD and autism, in that the latter foster more self acceptance, as opposed to tips and tricks to function better.

    It makes me wonder if I’ve had enough focus on self-acceptance of PDA life. I know my recent experience has been shaped by my attempting to regain functioning lost through bipolar episodes and burn out. I don’t want that experience to lead to a point of treating my PDA as something to be “fixed” though.

    A PDA neurotype leads to a very distinct way of being in the world. Like comfortandkindness says in her post, that way of being isn’t a problem to be solved. It’s something we can accept and embrace.

  • Other people’s enthusiasm

    I’ve been reading back through this blog, and it struck me – possibly my biggest trigger for demand anxiety is when other people are Super Enthusiastic!

    E.g. Oh I really wanna play this game! Let’s play several rounds!

    Oh you’re doing really well at this, let’s keep going!

    OMG I really love puzzles, and you’re a good help, let’s puzzle right now!

    Sigh. Every damn time, it’s fatiguing. I’ll often join in initially, and find I get a building, creeping sense of demand anxiety and need to stop way before the other person wants to. It’s very frustrating.

    I’m not actually sure what the answer to this is. I don’t like feeling like a “killjoy”, it’s lovely when others are enthusiastic. I just… it’s also hard, and anxiety provoking.