Blazing My Trail: Living and Thriving With Autism. Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenberg

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started blocking sound, I was spending an inordinate amount of time parsing it and becoming overwhelmed by it. As a result, I did not have the energy for fully attending to my other senses, particularly my visual sense. Driving became difficult because I felt overwhelmed by visual phenomena. Now that I have given myself permission to put sound in the background, my other senses have settled down considerably, and the visual world, far from being overwhelming, gives me great delight.

      Keeping track of finances and paying bills. For most of my adult life, I had the responsibility of paying every bill and accounting for every penny. I was the primary (and, for several years, the only) breadwinner in my first marriage, and keeping track of the finances was always my job. I chose it, because it gave me a sense of control—and because I hugely disliked trusting someone else to get it right.

      When I married Bob and quit my job to be a full-time, homeschooling mom in 2003, I let him take over the bill paying and finance tracking, because I trusted him and, frankly, I wanted the break. After a while though, I found that I missed it. So now, in addition to handling the finances for my books, I’ve again taken on the responsibility for paying the bills each week, for keeping track of our expenses from day to day, and for ensuring that there is always sufficient money in our accounts.

      Given that these activities combine my love of organizing things, my keen attentiveness to detail, and my innate good sense when it comes to money, I get a lot of satisfaction out of them.

      Running errands. I once cringed at the idea of running…an…an…an…errand. The possibility of auditory overload made me very anxious. But now, I look forward to going out and about. I like going to the post office, the bank, the art supplies store, the hardware store, and any other place without loud music cranked up. I use my earplugs for running errands, mainly to keep out competing sounds that my auditory system has to work too hard to process and manage. But if I have a question or need to pay for my items, I can converse.

      Going to appointments. When I have an appointment, sometimes talking works and sometimes it doesn’t. Everything depends upon the level of ambient noise, whether the other person is in a rush and talking quickly, how many people are in the room and participating in the conversation, and whether I have time to take notes and ask for clarification.

      One day last year, I went up to the local community college to discuss taking some online courses there. I needed to sit down with an adviser for an hour or so, and before I went, I called the office by means of the text relay service and told the adviser just what I needed. I let her know that if there were too much noise, or if we were too rushed, or if there were too many people in the environment, I’d need to use my text-to-text device.

      As it turned out, she was very sensitive to my needs, and we had a very enjoyable verbal conversation in a very quiet place. I decided not to take courses there after all, but I was glad that I was able to explore the option. Six months before, it would have seemed overwhelmingly beyond me.

      Being alone. Staying at home while Bob was traveling was my biggest challenge. For a while, I’d go with him on his frequent visits to New York City—partly just to travel out of town once in awhile, partly to see his dad, and partly to avoid being by myself, with all the fear and trembling being alone engendered.

      But now, I find myself enjoying the time alone. I love when Bob is here and I also love my solitude when I have the house to myself. I no longer suffer from anxiety and loneliness. In fact, when I am alone and in quiet, I find that I have even greater focus, discipline, and peace than ever before.

      What a tremendous change! It was a long time coming.

      Planning, executing, and transitioning between tasks. It’s been so long that I’ve had a problem in this area that I barely remember what it felt like. Now, I plan tasks with ease and I look forward to putting them into action—whether it’s putting together a shopping list before going to the co-op, planning and cooking a meal, paying bills, balancing our house accounts, writing, editing, gardening, or any number of other activities.

      What seemed like a life-changing difficulty two years ago is now so far in the past that I can see it for what it was—the result of a temporary low point from which I have recovered. With my renewed ability to put my gifts for organizing and planning into play, the quality of my life has improved dramatically.

      Working at a job. I’ve had some false starts and stops on the way to figuring out the best fit. Working at the local thrift store didn’t pan out for me, because the crowds and the music tended to overload my hearing. I’ve been making knitted items for the store to sell each winter, but I can’t work in crowded spaces. My auditory sensitivities make that impossible, even with ear protection.

      However, I’ve been able to bring all my years of editing experience to my work as a copy editor for our local, award-winning, independent weekly, The Commons. It’s great to be working again, especially for a nonprofit paper, at a job I enjoy.

      I am also putting my love of helping people to work in my position as a personal care assistant to a little boy with multiple disabilities. After being thoroughly trained in how to respond to his needs, I care for him both at his home and at my own.

      And, in the fall of 2011, I will be pursuing a master’s degree in History and Culture through Union Institute and University, with a concentration in Disability Studies. Union offers a fully online master’s program that will take me three years to complete.

      Making friends. Over the past two years, I have begun making new friends, both autistic and non-autistic, and I love my time with them. I have learned that I have to seek out sensitive people, no matter what their neurology. Sensitive people will respect my experience and listen to what I need, and I can offer exactly the same to them. I am a highly sensitive person, so it makes sense that I would be most compatible with other highly sensitive people.

      I’m also incredibly fortunate to live in a very friendly neighborhood. I enjoy chatting and laughing with the neighbors and helping them out. On my walks, I have all kinds of interesting talks with people, much as I did when my daughter was young and it seemed that I knew everyone in town.

      So Rachel, what happened? Did your autism get better? No, it didn’t get better—for the simple reason that it had never gotten worse. It only felt as though it had. I’ve since realized that the temporary fluctuation of abilities I was experiencing a couple of years ago wasn’t the result of autism, but of failing to take autism into consideration and live my life accordingly. In other words, because I didn’t know that I had Asperger’s, I couldn’t manage the condition—or my life—properly.

      I spent the first 50 years of my life doggedly attempting to eat, work, play, speak, act, and achieve like a typical person, and then some. I didn’t just go full steam ahead like a person with a typical neurology. I went beyond even that, probably in an attempt to compensate for what was different about me. Even if I had had typical wiring all those years, I could have easily driven myself into the ground.

      As it was, I was like a person with mobility issues trying to run a marathon every day and keep up with people whose bodies worked differently from mine. Burnout was inevitable.

      In a few short years, I seemed to go from a lifetime of being super-functional to struggling with basic things, like going food shopping. I thought it was the autism catching up with me. It wasn’t. It was my lifelong ignorance of being autistic that was catching up with me—along with the fact that I’d been put on medication that was wreaking havoc with my sensory and emotional life.

      Before my diagnosis, I never rested. I never gave myself a break. I never took care of my sensory needs. I never said “no” to anything. I never understood the impact of medication on my body and mind. I just drove myself, and drove myself,

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