Jump to navigation

You are currently browsing all posts tagged with 'peace'

Instant and Long Lasting!

  • Posted on October 6, 2008

I don’t know if NT (neurotypical) moms pay more attention to their NAT (neuro-a-typical) child’s physical environment than they do to what might be going on inside that child’s mind. Mind reading isn’t possible, but possibly these moms realize already that hyper and hypo sensitivity exists just as well from what thoughts are occurring as it does from what senses are being aroused by a child’s surroundings?

It’s always very important for me to understand as much as I possibly can. Logic is my hero! I can’t imagine life without it. I am exactly as The Logic Boy is described!

Sometimes though, logic isn’t enough. That’s where faith comes in.¹ Truth is the best medication for a troubled soul! I got a good reminder of that late last night.

Most people know you shouldn’t drink coffee, soda, eat chocolate, or have anything containing caffeine, close to bedtime. However, never underestimate what a disturbing thought can do before bedtime, especially if you’re an Aspie!

Darcy couldn’t have known that God would use perfect timing to lead me to her blog shortly after midnight. I used to say the same thing she did, “God never gives you more than you can handle.” God bless Darcy for naming her blog What We Need to pass along what a woman once said to her. It was, “No, God gives us what we need.”

After reading that powerful statement, I remembered I read that page of hers before and forgot that God gives His children exactly what they need. When you trust God implicitly, that’s all you need to know sometimes!

Anyhow, that thought, God gives us what we need, instantly put my mind and body to rest. I slept peacefully and can now enjoy today because I feel rested! :)

¹I choose to be misleading by saying faith can lack logic, because few people would believe that I can actually see the logic behind everything God gives and does. I’m not saying this was always the case though. This (super?)-natural ability is something only God can give to a person. There is no way I can teach it to others. Either God gives you it or He doesn’t. I can’t know why He chose to give me His gift of faith which happens to include logic. The only logical explanation I can come up with is actually quite simple→ That is what I need.

King Solomon prayed for wisdom. He got that and financial wealth; we got the book of Proverbs. I prayed for the gift of wisdom too (since being gullible is an Aspie characteristic, Godly wisdom is a must have). I received what I asked for (but I don’t always remember to use it!). However, instead of receiving financial wealth as a surprise bonus (which in my cause would probably destroy my life and make me miserable), I got a wealth of logic. Logic and wisdom are my best friends!

Tough Situations

  • Posted on August 1, 2008

When I first discovered an asperger support group to attend, I was elated with joy. It’s been a wonderful experience for me to finally get to see what neurotypicals detect that’s different about me. I could do this because of being with other aspies.

I gained a lot by attending and I also contributed what I could. Now it appears I’m back to my same road blocks. Indecision stinks! Do I keep going or has the season arrived for me to quit? I have a month and a half to decide, but I’ve also already had almost three weeks pass since I last attended. It’s an unusual break (normally the group meets every other week) that is matching my transition period.

Every now and then, I sense a major change occurring within my being. That explains how someone (such as myself) evolves towards becoming a radically different person over time. Some people never change, but then there are some who make re-adjustments now and then. Even though one may never stop going through transition periods, it is possible for some aspects of his character to remain constant (e.g., honesty). I’d like to call it ‘growing up’, but that doesn’t quite describe what I mean. Maybe I can’t explain it? I can try though.

It is not hormones that cause this type of indecision. It is the combination of learning new information and realizing certain facts. In the case with my decision about continuing to attend the asperger group, no one is going to realize why I quit (if I do). It would be best if I didn’t try to explain such a decision to them. They would not be able to see my inner struggle with my conscience, nor could they understand it.

Talk about frustration! I describe my being an asperger person in an aspie group as being a misfit among misfits. The reason I’ve written the posts that I have lately is to bring awareness to how complicated human behavior is. I feel like I always want to be telling people, “Don’t try to figure me out. I’m too confusing for you.” Since it took my husband and daughter a couple of decades or more (my son needs more time) to merely begin to understand me, I then wonder why do I even bother to blog. I blog on with the hope that there are some tidbits of information others may find useful. To remain silent would be like throwing a life away. Everyone has something to offer others—even a child to his younger sibling.

Being the non-conformist aspie that I am (i.e., one who remains true to self), I find myself now having to hide vital aspects of my being (if I continue to go to the asperger support group). I have to refrain from truly voicing the way I live life as an asperger person, along with having to hide what I really think in order to avoid confrontations. Why is this? It’s because of my being different spiritually.

With my aspie nature, I have a predisposition towards obsessive/compulsive behavior. Living this long, I now know that this will never go away. All throughout my life, one compulsion after another has found its way to being a challenge for me. That’s the bad news. The good news is I also know that for each of these compulsive behaviors, every one of them eventually is overcome.

Here are a couple of examples of what I could safely talk about without stepping out of bounds:

1. As a teenager and young adult, I struggled with compulsive eating. For those who have never experienced this, you’re most likely not going to know how horrible this is. I was stuck in this vicious cycle for years. During this time, I was also spiritually lost. Around the age of 22, I finally sought help from a psychiatrist (he actually made my problem worse). This compulsion was like a roller coaster—sometimes it was intense and other times I thought it might be gone. I cannot pinpoint exactly how old I was when this compulsion finally came to an end, but I will guess that the turning point was when I was 27 or 28 years old.

This compulsion was the longest lasting one. The only thing that was keeping me from committing suicide over this nightmare was hanging onto one thought. The more I reminded myself of it, the less the compulsive eating had a hold on me. I knew that since I was able to eat in a normal way (eat when hungry; not eat when not hungry) before adolescence, there was no logical reason why I could not do so again. Guilt, followed by self-hatred, definitely compounded this problem.

2. This example is both a compulsion and an addiction that can happen to anyone who engages into this practice that leads to a habit→ cigarette smoking. It wasn’t until I had seen a color poster (on July 4th, 1976) of two lungs side-by-side (comparing a lung from a cigarette smoker with one of a non-smoker) before I began being sincerely concerned over what I was doing to myself. I knew most people complained about putting on weight after quitting smoking, but again I believed (without knowing what it was called) in the self-fulfilling prophecy (the Pygmalion Effect).¹  I knew I’d have to be creative again, especially since two failed attempts at quitting were not helping my confidence. Logical thinking told me that I’d have to attempt quitting whenever an opportunity would arise that would disassociate my reminders of cigarette smoking. In January of 1979, such an opportunity arrived (thanks to enrolling into Florida Atlantic University). During the early morning hour of moving out of New York State (after going through the thruway toll booth to pick up my ticket and before exiting the ongoing ramp to the thruway), I threw away my last pack of cigarettes. The excitement from my new adventure into the unknown kept me mentally occupied enough to forget about cigarettes.

Nothing about being in a new State existed to condition the response of me wanting to smoke a cigarette. I’d describe it as being like taking dirty keys away from a baby who puts them into his mouth and giving him something more interesting to pay attention to.

Here is a recent example of what would be futile to mention in an aspie group:

I was obsessed over upgrading and tweaking my son’s computer to maximize his potential success at playing World of Warcraft. That might sound like a simple project, but unless someone knows me, I have a knack for making a simple thing into a complex nightmare because of striving for perfection. It’s akin to major overhauls—sometimes you have to make a big mess before you can fix things properly.

This obsession was so bad that it led to becoming a physically painful compulsion. Even though my arm and neck were hurting insanely because of being in the same position for hours and days on end, I was determined to finish what I started. The trap of this obsession was believing the goal was near completion, but in reality it was not (thanks to unknown issues hiding in the next step→ like such things as Windows XP updates stubbornly refusing to install and not knowing that the most recent drivers for the new graphics card were programmed too complex for the operating system for starters!).

So, what made this obsession/compulsion cease? I’ll just say it was a non-technically related shock (wake-up call) that was more painful than what my body could do to me. God was trying to tell me that my behavior was not His will (i.e., I was being ignorantly sinful by not realizing how some of the particular ways that I ‘help’ my son affects him).

The amazing part was the contrast between the before and after part of this O/C. My anxiety level, before this compulsion’s end, was stuck at a high level. As soon as I realized that what I was doing was going against God’s will and repented, that anxiety disappeared as if it was never there! I was so tired that, on the day after this, I slept until 6 PM! I cannot describe how peaceful it feels to be severed from an O/C behavior, so I will not try. The last time I slept that late into the day was over a quarter of a century ago! Now when I look back at it, I see how insane sin is. In fact, that’s the definition of insanity→ practicing a lie. Lies are illusions/deceptions. I am beginning to think that obsessive/compulsive behaviors are another form of sin.

Hopefully now you can understand better how my faith creates road blocks in such situations as sharing solutions to problems in an asperger group. I cannot share these kinds of success stories offline, because I’ve never even met another Christian aspie who can relate to such experiences. I know I cannot be the only one. I do know though God has His reasons as to why He is preventing me from meeting others who I think would comprehend me the best.

¹I lost weight when I quit smoking and I wasn’t even on a diet! That’s not usual for me, considering that most things in my life are the reverse of normal.

Purposeful Boundaries

  • Posted on May 21, 2008

Even though I’m not writing about Asperger’s syndrome today, the message can easily be applied to both AS and neurotypical syndrome people. My last activity yesterday, before retiring for sleep, happened to be caused by deciding where to relocate a dusty little red book on one of my shelves. I almost always go through such things whenever I’ve acquired a new book. It’s like defragging my hard drive so the Windows operating system can find files faster, since they’re more organized then. Excessive explanation? Not really. It’s to show God can work in strange ways even if they seem trivial.

The little red book (← a pun is there folks!) I’m referring to is titled The Book of Prayers: Compiled for Everyday Worship. It was published in 1981 by Avenel Books in New York and edited by Leon and Elfreda McCauley. Most people would glean through its pages and think it to be dull. Maybe I did too, since I never paid much attention to it during the quarter of a century that it’s been sitting on my shelf.

Anyhow, earlier last evening, I had been brought down in spirits because of being reminded of the harsh realities Aspies face in regards to employment due to how illogical (insane) the work force scene is. It came from the book Theory of Mind and the Triad of Perspectives on Autism and Asperger Syndrome: A View from the Bridge by Olga Bogdashina (more specifically from Temple Grandin’s statements repeated on page 158):

“Many people with autism expect all people to be good. It is a rude awakening to learn that some people are bad and might try to exploit them. AS people often cannot hold down jobs as they are unable (and often unwilling) to ‘play social games’. They are straightforward (not rude). They cannot accept that ‘know-who (to please)’ is more important than ‘know-how (to do the job)’.”

If all people lived to please God, then the work force scene would be logical and sane instead. Oh well, that’s for the new earth — for now, there is still work to be done in this present one. Even though I enjoy most of the work I do,¹ in spite of not getting paid and never receiving encouragement or praise for it, I don’t enjoy being constantly compared to and judged against the lifestyles of ‘normal’ women today.

Enough said about what brought me down; now to what elevated me! Page 28, of the prayer book, contained one called For a Purposeful Life. These are the words which blessed me with the same peace that children acquire from knowing their boundaries given to them from loving parents for their protection:

“When we have found life good, O Lord, we have asked for longer days; when we have found it heavy, we have asked for a lighter load. Teach us to accept whatever comes to us as useful cargo freighted with possible blessing. Help us to wrest a blessing from circumstance, to work with thee in making all things work together for good because we will to live according to thy purpose. Amen.”

Living according to God’s purpose, rather than according to what I want God’s purpose to be for me, is a comfort zone that no prescribed medication can offer. I should know that by now. It must go to show that knowing is not the same thing as humbly abiding in that knowledge.

I don’t know what other blessings lay ahead from the prayers in this book, but I’m eager to find out. The introduction The Strength of Personal Prayer by Harry Emerson Fosdick is loaded with profound statements. I shall summarize this post with a portion from page 4:

“There are two aspects to every strong life—rootage and fruitage, receptivity and activity, relaxation and tension, resting back and working hard. A man who cannot do the former can never do the latter well, never! He who cannot rest, cannot work; he who cannot let go, cannot hold on; he who cannot find footing, cannot go forward. The offices of psychiatrists are littered with folk who have mastered the techniques of activity and aggressiveness and now are going all to pieces because they have failed to master that other technique: they have nothing to rest back upon.”

¹It’s the household engineering duties that can be a drag, but then when I feel that way, I know what’s in need of readjustment (me). Being thankful is the cure for most everything → the greatest is being spared from eternal annihilation!

Top


Creative Commons License
© 2008 - 2010 Sheila Schoonmaker