Autism & femininity

I was just thinking about this today and thought it might be interesting to other people.

depsite being very comfortable in my identity as a women, especially as a younger teen I found it hard to connect with my femininity, or rather to feel worthy to be seen as a woman because I hardly felt like I was even seen as a human. I think many autistic individuals can relate to the experience of being treated like a weird spectacle in school. I wasn’t even diagnosed at this time- it was like everyone around me knew I was ‘odd’ before even I knew. It’s like a cruel inside joke that only I’m not in on. People would be fake nice to me (I didn’t know it was fake at the time) and laugh at me. I was asked out a few times as a ‘joke’- even back then I knew it was a joke though because my self esteem has always been so low that the idea of anyone liking me felt ridiculous.

I found it hard to feel like a normal girl when I felt like a complete alien- I didn’t have normal teen girl experiences at all. I was too busy navigating the world and my own brain, as well as spending pretty much all of my adolescence masking. I couldn’t understand why girls at the time were into things like pop culture and boys and partying as I was so out of the loop. I feel like growing up autistic is feeling more mature than everyone your age but at the same time like a lost child. To me, at least.

This is sort of just a string of my thoughts but I thought I’d share anyway. Like most of my thoughts it kind of inspires some sort of art piece so maybe I’ll have a new project I guess. There’s lots more I could add on to these thoughts but I’m just not very good at wording things.

Parents
  • I found it really hard to connect with any kind of femininity as a kid and for most of my teens, because I had absolutely no idea why the other girls liked the things they did and their rejection of me led to my own rejection of things I considered 'girly'. I'm asexual as well as autistic so I got a double dose of "I have no idea what they're on about and now they all think I'm a babyish freak".

    It was actually getting into the goth subculture that helped me figure it out! Once I found somewhere that I felt was a good fit for me, I was able to be feminine on my own terms and not those of the secondary school popularity contest. Strangely, I feel like I'm wearing a 'normal human person' costume if I wear women's mainstream fashion and makeup but I feel very comfortable and happy looking like I've dressed up as Morticia Addams Joy

    I think for me, I had to own my peculiarity and find a way to embrace it. Being strange on purpose has given me more leeway to be myself, and feminine goth aesthetics in particular have allowed me to consciously opt out of a mainstream idea of womanhood that I was never going to achieve if I tried.

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  • I found it really hard to connect with any kind of femininity as a kid and for most of my teens, because I had absolutely no idea why the other girls liked the things they did and their rejection of me led to my own rejection of things I considered 'girly'. I'm asexual as well as autistic so I got a double dose of "I have no idea what they're on about and now they all think I'm a babyish freak".

    It was actually getting into the goth subculture that helped me figure it out! Once I found somewhere that I felt was a good fit for me, I was able to be feminine on my own terms and not those of the secondary school popularity contest. Strangely, I feel like I'm wearing a 'normal human person' costume if I wear women's mainstream fashion and makeup but I feel very comfortable and happy looking like I've dressed up as Morticia Addams Joy

    I think for me, I had to own my peculiarity and find a way to embrace it. Being strange on purpose has given me more leeway to be myself, and feminine goth aesthetics in particular have allowed me to consciously opt out of a mainstream idea of womanhood that I was never going to achieve if I tried.

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