Saturday, 15 January 2022

Autism & Villages

I spent much of today procrastinating.

Instead of tidying up a few irritating loose ends in my college portfolio, I draped myself across the couch like I was in the terminal stages of a Victorian wasting disease.

My portfolio will be assessed in three days.  The bits that need attention will take about an hour to tidy up.  It's not even proper work.

But I acted like deadlines weren't even a thing.  It was of grave importance that my eyebrows were tweezed into perfect symmetry.  It was most urgent that the dog was groomed.  And all the tea wasn't going to drink itself.

My portfolio gathered dust while I alphabetised the spice cupboard.

I'd like to make my procrastination sexier by saying it was a coping mechanism, used to protect me from my fear of not being good enough..... like a type of performance anxiety.  But the real, and tragically less sexy, truth is that I was just being a massive lazyarse (real word).

And I loved every minute of it.

I idled the day away deeply appreciating having a lovely husband who will take Finian to youth club while I crack on with (*cough*) work.  I am weak with gratitude that I have emerged from the happy side of many months of intense therapy, now able to eat, sleep and not view the world as a hostile place.  

Having a kiddo with autism is hard.  That's hardly headline news.  Crawling through decades of psychological awfulness (without much grace, it has to be said) was also super not-good while managing autism.

But when things are hard, I've learned to look for the good people.  The ones who hug you when you're a stinky mess.  The ones who meet you for a walk or a coffee when you're Not Your Best.  The ones who let you know they're there for you, even when you've driven them insane with your lunacy.  There are good people who supported me without knowing it..... my yoga teacher, my college buddies, strangers who smiled at me in shops.

Before this becomes an Oscar acceptance speech, I think it's important to point something out.

Among our autism circles, we often remark that it takes a village to raise an ASD kiddo (albeit a weirdly niche one, characterised by much talk about streaking kids, and children taking enormous dumps in the display toilets in B&Q).  

But as I continue to flounder my way through this perplexing world, it's clear to me that it takes a village to raise every one of us.  It takes a little humility to accept this, but all of us need each other. 


Portfolio done, with fabulous eyebrows



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