I’d been told a lot of my life I should talk about and write down my life experiences. My perspective, I’ve been told, is unique and I’m a good enough communicator for people to clearly understand and listen to me talking about my life.
Yeah, yeah – an autistic person who’s a good communicator sounds like the definitive oxymoron. But if I am such a person, then doesn’t that oxymoron no longer exist? */stereotype demolished*
At any rate, sharing my life story and perspective has weighed on my mind for a long time. And with that constantly in my head, I keep going back to my childhood perspective of the world. Namely, that I was always being watched. Watched and judged.
Ever since I was five I knew I was different. My earliest memory comes from about age two, but before kindergarten I thought my life was pretty normal. I thought everyone went to two preschools – a specialized one where I was taught to speak through reading and one regular run by my family’s synagogue – and took the bus between the two, had college kids take them on outings to the park/zoo/beach/wherever, and went to a place I called “Esther House” to play with a nice older lady (who of course turned out to be a therapist). But kindergarten changed all that. Suddenly I was in a classroom with a ton of kids not like me and they all seemed to have it easier than me. They didn’t get easily frustrated when not getting certain learning skills. They didn’t have meltdowns when said frustrations overcame their ability to cope and weren’t taken out of the classroom by adults to calm down. As the years passed, those other kids didn’t have an adult in the classroom specifically there for them because of the meltdowns and didn't have time outs where they had to be supervised in the administrative offices by the school's staff. And of course, those kids didn’t have a hard time making friends because of all the above and were often made fun of or treated badly by kids and adults alike because of it.
I’ll talk later about when I discovered I was autistic (believe me, that’s a story in itself), but all those things made me feel like I was under constant surveillance. Like everyone was scrutinizing and judging me. And that’s where the fishbowl comes in – I always felt like I was a goldfish in clear glass bowl with everyone the world pressed against the glass, waiting for me to do something "crazy". Something "crazy", like jump. And when I would inevitably jump, the world would scoff and go, “Of course she did that, isn’t that funny? Isn’t that crazy? Stupid crazy goldfish.”