Recently, my therapist told me she thinks I might be on the autistic spectrum. I have a number of relatives who are clearly autistic -- one child, a brother, a father, and an aunt. I say "clearly" because my child has been diagnosed autistic, and the others are very similar to her. Since I'm not like them, I have been pretty sure I'm not autistic. I don't have any of the social problems that my child has.
But I've been thinking, and I realize that there are a number of things about me that other autistic people report having.
1. I've always felt like I wasn't really a member of the human race. As a child, I got called "weird" a lot and couldn't relate to a lot of what the other boys thought, did, liked, etc. For instance, although I more or less understand what people mean by the word "masculinity," I've never been able to understand why it's so important to a lot of the people of my assigned gender; I just accept that that's the way they are.
2. It seems like most people unconsciously think and act like whatever group they're in for a while. It's like they're chameleons, becoming like whatever background they live in, to the point of feeling like this is who they are. This has always seemed pretty bizarre to me; it's not something I can do or even want to do.
3. I have a hard time becoming something other than what I am. I say of my family of origin, "you either take us as we are, or don't take us at all." I have frequently been called "stubborn" or "rigid." The fact that a lot of people see the way I am as incomprehensible or unacceptable is simply one of the hazards of being me and not something I can do anything about (however much other people may insist I can.)
4. My thoughts don't seem to be verbal -- or linear. No matter what language I'm speaking, I have to translate my thoughts into words, and sometimes I have trouble finding the right word. (Sometimes the word that occurs to me isn't English, but from some other language I know.) And my ideas often only make sense if you already are familiar with some other ideas I haven't articulated yet. A large part of the work of writing involves arranging and rearranging the thoughts so there are no reverse dependencies. It makes it hard for me to participate in discussions, since by the time I've figured out how to say what I'm thinking, everyone has moved far ahead. It's easier for me to just sit in a corner and think my own non-verbal non-linear thoughts.
Not sure where to go with this, or if there's any point. At the end of the day, I'm still just who I am, for better or worse.