Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Cybernetic Space Princess on Mars.

"When I was a kid, I always imagined I'd be normal by now." —Hannelore, Questionable Content.

I had a phone interview the other day in which I was asked about my writing process. I explained it—the checklists, the word counts, the editorial process—and the interviewer laughed and said, "So it's almost like an OCD thing, right?"

"Not almost," I said. "I have OCD."

He stopped laughing.

On most weekday mornings, I get out of bed at 5:13 AM. I write this in my planner. On Wednesdays, I get out of bed at 5:30 AM. I write this in my planner, too. On the weekends, I sleep later; last Sunday, I slept until 8:23 AM. I know this, because I wrote it in my planner.

After I get up, I dress, ablute, and check in online. This is done by visiting Gmail, personal mail, Twitter, LiveJournal, and FaceBook, in that order. Always in that order. I pack my lunch. On weekdays (except for Wednesdays) I leave the house at 5:34 AM, to catch the first bus. I know this, because all these things, too, are written in my planner. So is everything else. What exercises I will do, what my assigned word counts will be, what to remember to say to my roommates, whether it's time to brush the cat...everything.

I have been a member of Weight Watchers since late 2004. I like Weight Watchers. It gives me an excuse to write down everything I eat, and turn every activity into a number to be added to a little column. In the times where I can't attend meetings and get new "official" trackers, those same counts wind up going into my planner, along with a record of what time I took my multivitamin and how much water I've had to drink. What shows I watched that day. What books I read.

Tiny columns of numbers march along the sides of the calendar—how many days to book release, how many days since book release, how many days since I did something that I'm waiting to hear more information on. I record the return dates of shows that I watch, the release dates of movies, the official dates of conventions. Birthdays and ages. I celebrate friendship anniversaries and remember strange holidays that, having made it into my calendar once, are now a permanent part of my personal year.

When I see street numbers or phone numbers or the like, I will automatically start picking them apart to determine whether they are either a multiple of nine or a prime number. Either of these is deeply comforting to me. Numbers that are one digit off in either direction can be distracting, if I've been having a bad enough day. I would be perfectly happy eating the same things for every meal, every day, for the rest of my life.

People sometimes ask me how I can bear it; how I can break my life down into schedules and checklists and tasks without going crazy. But the thing is, that's how my brain works. I look at other people's lives and wonder how they can bear it—having to agonize over menus, not knowing where to sit, not remembering the order of the primes, not knowing when all their favorite TV shows come back on the air. I find the framework of my life to be freeing, not confining, and I don't really comprehend living any other way.

And yes, sometimes I have to make concessions in order to remain stable. I arrive at the airport two hours before my flights, period. I don't care if I have to miss things to do it; the rules say "two hours before," and I arrive two hours before. I become uncomfortable and have difficulty focusing if someone takes my chair in a setting where I have defined patterns. Some things have to be done in a certain order, and if I try to do them in a different order, I am likely to become very difficult to deal with. Failure to complete a to-do list is upsetting to me on a deep, profound level that I have difficulty explaining in verbal terms; it's just wrong. My friends learn that if you're going on a social outing with me, you need to arrive on time or deal with me having a meltdown, that I do not want to have adventurous food, and that I will throw you out of the house if your arrival interferes with standing scheduled events. And the beat goes on.

Because I am very functional, and because the standard image of "someone with OCD" is Adrian Monk or Hannelore, I do occasionally have to deal with people assuming I'm exaggerating. I don't compulsively wash my hands or clean my kitchen, I'm definitely not a germaphore, and if I re-type books completely between drafts, well, that's just a quirk. But obsession and compulsion both take many forms, and while I have found peace with mine, and consider them a vital part of who I am, that doesn't mean they don't exist. (Why I would joke about having something that is considered a mental illness, I don't know.)

Remember that just because someone is a functional, relatively normal-seeming human being, that doesn't mean they're wired the way that you are. I have to remind myself that not everybody wants their day broken down into fifteen-minute increments, because for me, that is the norm. The human mind is an amazing thing, full of possibilities, and each of us expresses them differently. I am a cybernetic space princess from Mars, and that's not a choice I made; that's the way I was made. I can get an address on Earth, but Mars will always be my home.

Whatever planet you're from, that's okay. Just try not to assume that everyone you know is from the same place. I'd be willing to bet you that they're not.
Tags: contemplation, from mars, medical fu, oh the humanity, so the marilyn
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  • 134 comments
that I do not want to have adventurous food

And here I was, hoping to take you to Cafe Raw in P-Hill, where they have "blood" listed as one of their available beverages, and the rest of the menu is crazy enough to make you think they aren't kidding.

For serious, though, I know the OCD ways. My paternal grandmother is a controlled hoarder, my dad is a semi-controlled hoarder (if my mom didn't secretly throw stuff out we'd be buried in the house in a year), and I am a self-aware controlled hoarder. I allow some hoarding compulsions to keep the rest at bay, and I have to strictly watch myself. It's like sex addicts, with the inner/middle/outer circle. As I speak, I have a container with used staples in my desk drawer that I save after removing them from documents. When it gets full? I'll throw it out, feel sad for a few days, and start again.

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Hoarding isn't so much a sign of OCD as a cousin. The jury's out on whether it's a sub-disorder or its own thing, but a genetic component has been identified. Your thing with books sounds like bibliomania. The rest... some people are magpies without hoarding tendencies. The difference is that I actually find myself compelled to save garbage-y things, and things I have no logical reason to save. I get upset when I have to throw away yarn scraps, because you never know, I might use them someday. Except I never will, and I know it. I'll buy clothes at thrift stores that don't fit me, but are nice, because I might know someone who would like it or fit it. I can also live with piles of mess that other people are alarmed, not just put off by, and it doesn't even register as "Maybe this is a problem..."

But the main thing for me is being compelled to save... everything. I watch myself, so I periodically purge, or I've trained myself to disregard the cringing induced by tossing out junk mail and old papers, but it's there, every day. I also feel compelled to collect things when I really have only a tangential or lukewarm liking/connection for it. I've gotten better at fighting that urge, but I still feel it. My dad, who isn't so self-aware, bought six telescopes and every back issue of Sky and Telescope magazine after reconnecting with a high school acquaintance who's discovered a half-dozen things going around outer space. Has he ever read any of the magazines, or used the telescopes? No. But he felt compelled to buy them after talking to that guy. He bought four vacuums one time after his brother said he liked his new vacuum, and he assembled them all and tested them out and said he was going to sell the ones he didn't want, except he can't let go of them.

Don't even get me started on him discovering Craigslist and buying four hundred dollars worth of bricks.
See, that doesn't count as "adventurous food" in the sense of "Seanan, you need to not eat the same thing for every meal for six weeks" (which I sometimes get). That counts as "an adventure, with food." And I'm okay with that.