Who else was bullied in high school?

I want to add a content warning here for bullying.

Hello!

I'm fairly newly diagnosed woman at the grand age of 32. When I was diagnosed the psychiatrist said that years ago I wouldn't have been diagnosed with our understanding of the autistic spectrum has changed over time. 

I keep thinking back to my time in school, I went to a girls school, it had a bad reputation locally and it was awful.

I have always had dreams about being back in school but they have become almost nightly since my diagnosis.

Academically, I did well in school, I thoroughly enjoyed some subjects - English, RE, Health and Social Care, Graphics. Socially, not so much although by the final two years I had settled into a friendship group with fellow nerdy kids. 

I always felt like an outcast, other girls made fun of me for every little thing, my frizzy hair, my body, my 'posh' ways of speaking, my geekiness, my online presence (these were the early days of social media), my interests.

I tried so desperately to fit in, I would listen to music I didn't like feign interest in things I didn't like and changed my ways of speaking. I couldn't recognize when people were being mean to me - that fake nice thing that girls would do that I still would not be able to recognize today!

I feel like I'm grieving for what could have been, my experience of school could have been so different in my autism was recognised and catered for. In Year 9, so at 13/14 years old I went through an awful stage of anxiety and school avoidance, I just didn't want to be there, I was just so overwhelmed and sitting in a class felt like punishment. 

It was actually only during therapy a few years ago in my late twenties that I had the sudden realization that I was bullied, that my experience wasn't typical. It wasn't normal for people to steal your belongings, to be pinched, to have your skirt pulled up, to be threatened, to have everything you do analyzed and criticized. 

My understanding now is that my experience is very common amongst autistic people. I am on the waiting list for therapy with the NHS as this is something I really need to be able to move on from.

Parents
  • I suspect the greater proportion of us here were. My life at secondary school was absolute hell - not only was I neurologically different (which I have just found out at 49 to be autism), but I was really small until I was 15, and I had all sorts of braces for dental issues. Those included one which linked my top and bottom jaw together, with just a slot to speak through. Combine that with a complete lack of sporting ability and a mother who always bought me the most uncool bags, coats etc., and I was the primary target.

    It got bad enough I could have had half a dozen other students expelled - I was found by a teacher, folded double and stuffed in a bin, on top of a filing cabinet, in an unlit store cupboard with no handle on the inside of the door. I think the mental torment of always watching my back and wondering what would happen next were worse than the physical action.

    Thankfully, when we moved up to 6th form, all the cool kids had the main common room, and all the weirdos, misfits and outcasts like me made another room our home. That was the first time I didn't feel alone at school. Thirty years on, I'm still in touch with most of that little gang, who probably saved my life. 

  • Aw bless you, I'm sorry you were put through that but I am so glad to hear that your friends are still in your life now! Sixth form was much better for me too, I met a gang of fellow weirdos!

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