Seanan McGuire (seanan_mcguire) wrote,
Seanan McGuire
seanan_mcguire

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Odd duck, normal platypus.

"Can I promise you that I'm going to get better? No. This is what you get, you know. This incomplete person, with toothbrushes, and with rubber gloves, and with so much love for you. But if that's not what you want, then you need to be honest with me, and with yourself. And the sooner the better." —Emma Pillsbury, Glee.

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

Before I begin, I want to make it clear that this is not the first time I have talked about my OCD, and the way it impacts my life. I don't talk about it in depth all that often, because it's a daily thing for me. I'm not "normal" five days out of the week, and OCD on Mondays and Thursdays. I'm not cyclical. I am programmed in a way that doesn't quite fit the currently defined human median, and that's how I function all the time.

I started displaying signs of OCD when I was nine, although I didn't get formally diagnosed until I was nineteen. Because I'm not germaphobic (if anything, I'm virophillic) or a "cleaner," it was easy to write my insistence on following patterns and maintaining routines off as just one more aspect of me being a weird kid. And I was a weird kid, with or without the OCD. It's impossible for me to know who I would have been with a differently wired brain, but I like to think that I would have been a version of the self I am now. Just maybe one with a little less stuff, and a little less esoteric knowledge about bad B-grade horror movies.

My diagnosis was almost accidental. I was depressed; I went to see a doctor about my depression; one thing led to another; we arrived at a place that we both agreed matched up with the contents of my brain. (OCD is sometimes connected to depression. Hell, OCD sometimes causes depression, either because you can't keep up with your obsessions, or because your compulsions make you sad. I've had both these experiences. Neither is particularly fun.) I promptly told absolutely no one, because the OCD jokes were already common within my social circle, and I didn't want to deal. But I did start putting some basic coping strategies in place, and things got better. I didn't fly into a towering rage over people being late if we didn't set a start time. I learned to eat food without mashing it into an indistinguishable slurry. The beat went on.

As I've gotten older, my symptoms have matured with the rest of me, as have my coping strategies. I've finally reached the point where I can be less than two hours early for my flight, providing I have a printed boarding pass and priority boarding. I can travel with people who are more laid back than I am (although, to be fair, that's everyone). I can even go for dinner without having a pre-memorized menu (I don't get credit for this one; it turns out you can, with time, memorize a wide enough range of food combinations to be safe within a number of specific cuisines). And I mostly don't take it out on other people when things go wrong.

One in fifty Americans lives with OCD. I won't say "suffers from," because not all of us are suffering; I am not suffering. I am no more or less normal than anyone else. It's just that I start from a different position on the field. Some people with OCD do suffer, because it can be a crippling condition. It's the luck of the draw, the same as anything else.

The dominant idea of OCD is still Adrian Monk or Hannelore, or Emma from Glee. I've been in tears over her twice this season, because it breaks my heart a little when I see her struggling to control something she never asked for, never did anything to earn, and has to deal with all the same. Most people with OCD aren't these stereotypes. They're your friend who always has hand sanitizer, or your cousin who never leaves the house until seven minutes after the hour. They're the guy you went to college with who has a collection of lawn gnomes in his bathroom, and buys a new one every six months. They're your favorite football player. They're that composer you like.

They're me.

I made a comment on Twitter earlier today that I was an "odd duck," because I wanted to dance to a Ludo song at my wedding (no, one isn't planned, I just like to plan ahead). Celticora replied, "You're not an odd duck, you're a normal platypus." I think I'm going to roll with that. So the next time someone wants to be early, or can't leave the house without checking that the toaster is unplugged, or does something else you can't understand but that doesn't actually hurt you, remember, it's a big ecosystem. We have room for ducks and platypi.

Everybody loves a semi-aquatic egg-laying mammal of action, right?
Tags: contemplation, from mars, medical fu, state of the blonde
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I have similar sorts of issues because of my Asperger's syndrome. I'm high enough functioning that people don't realize it's there unless they really know me and I can get through the day without much impairment on my activities, but it's enough there that if someone drops something unexpected on me - like asking if I want to go to the movies with less than a day's notice and even if I had nothing planned for that day, I'll panic because it wasn't in my internal list of possibilities and I can't handle the change. Usually I'll end up saying no because it wasn't planned for and I don't have the mental time to change gears from "Doing nothing" to "Going to the movies".

A friend of mine said something similar about the duck vs platypus comment: she said that Asperger's people have QWERTY thoughts and not alphabetical thoughts because of the way we process information.
That's fascinating. I make lists of what I need to do, sometimes days in advance, and I get completely upset (sometimes to the point of rage or tears) if my plan changes. I also avoid times when the stores are crowded, because all the crowds and pushing make me crazy. And here I thought it was just unreasonable me, getting worse as I get older... I guess it's nice to know I'm not alone.
My spouse (undiagnosed Asperger's, but shares most key qualities with diagnosed kid) hates crowds; the Mall is off-limits from about mid-November...

(The kid, on the other hand, is both Asperger's and an extrovert. This is... interesting to live with.)

Hooray for Platypuses!
Lists are good. Plan changes are bad. Especially abrupt ones. I've broken into crying sometimes because of it. Especially big ones. I have a couple of friends who are big on Spontaneity and I'm all, "Well what about next weekend?" It makes things interesting at times. I hate crowded stores. I hate malls in general. My brother on the other hand loves them, but he loves shopping. Parties and bars are right out for me which makes it difficult for me to meet people.

We're all over. You are not alone! And the internet is good for that. :D
The Husband is the spontaneous one in this partnership, although he toned it down a little once we had the daughters, because one can't be spontaneous when the baby needs feeding or changing. Of course, they're grown now, but I'm still making lists and scheduling and planning. It's a dirty job, but somebody's got to do it. Besides, it's a good excuse to use all those different-colored gel pens...

Yes, I was just thinking that the internet is a fine place to meet other introverts. :)
Fortunately my dad's OCD and my mom's an aspie too so lists aren't a problem. My dad just sometimes forgets that I can't handle spontaneity in his efforts to help me.

Excuses to use different colored gel pens are always good reasons to do stuff. Especially if it requires you having to go to the art store to buy new ones. :D

I've met lots of friends this way. I've only met a few of them face to face, but they've been helpful with support and things like that when I need them.