Prepare to enter the wild and wooly world of an adult with Aspergers Syndrome, a form of autism characterized by intellignce, quirks, social difficulties and downright strange and oddish behaviours.

People with Aspergers generally are high functioning in everyday life but have great difficulty connecting with others due to the inability to read faces, body language and subtle verbal clues. They also tend to take words literally and have a hard time multi-tasking.

Oversensitivity to touch (clothing has to be soft and often the tags removed), light (do not leave home without the sunglasses), sound (loud noises and noisey places are avoided), taste (many Aspies have quite a limited diet and are frequently very picky eaters) and smells makes the everyday existence more of a challenge.

Fasten your seatbelts and come on in...
To find out more about what Aspergers is..please check out my earliest blog entries

Friday, December 18, 2020

I am Mute

It has been 8 days since I've had a conversation, laughed out loud or made an audible sigh. Even my yawns seem strange without their verbal intonations. 
Being Mute is akin to being in another, separate and distinct world. Or, in a different vein, it can be seen as an invisible barrier, a thick layer of protection that wraps around me and insulates me from the world.
Mute, the external world falls away losing its importance and quite a bit of its previous value. 
It's like falling into a sub-world whereby you exist but are not as readily seen. You walk along alone as engaging in any type of communication the effort to be understood is too costly. 
Some people will think you are broken, a project to be analyzed and fixed. 
When I am Mute, my brain sometimes stops producing words all together. I might be unable to form letters, text or write. I have to wait for the words to come back so I'll go along with the rest of my day, chores, tasks and hobbies. 
The times of nowords can also mean that I lose the ability to comprehend the written word. My novel reading comes to an abrupt halt. Bookmark in place, I recline. 
Clearly, I am in that place where I'm not quite able to string words together to form those tangible, coherent sentences that I'm usually blessed with.
Being Mute is both easy and hard. Easy because I'm unperturbed regarding the sick, crazed world around me. Hard because I've become more invisible. 
My fate rests solely in my own hands when I am unable to ask for help.
I have no control over when my Selective Mutism starts, how long it lasts or when it chooses to end.
I feel different, weird and separate. 
I'm an extremely odd duck.

Sunday, March 15, 2020

Always and Never Alone book free

I'm currently running a free ebook promotion Sunday March 15th 8 am until Tuesday March 17th 8am on Amazon, Kindle.
You can pick up a free copy of my extraordinary memoir, Always and Never Alone: the true story of an Autistic and how she got that way, during these two days.
I've sold dozens of copies and received some amazing positive feedback.

I don't know why I'm here

I'm having one of those days whereby I am clueless as to the reason for my existence and inert as I have no idea what my function is or should be.
Seriously, I breathe, take up space, leave an impression within the cushion of my chair yet that is all. Ambition is gone along with "what the hell should I be doing with myself". 
Thus I sit. I breathe. I exist. Without knowing the reason.