14. Dark night of a lonesome soul
Is this the way out? To fall into the darkness not knowing when the sun will return? If it will return? No, when. When the sun comes back. It will come back-it’s a matter of when, and if you will be alive to see it. You hope you will. You wonder if anyone will be there to watch the sunrise with you. But most likely you will be alone. You have always been alone, even when you were forced not to be.
Autistic loneliness is a paradox. You isolated yourself in second grade, doing your schoolwork on top of the recycling box in the corner instead of your desk. You think you’ve matured since then, have figured out the rules well enough to play, however badly. But you cannot be known, and any capacity you had to love, to give of yourself, is spent just trying to give yourself air. Like the flight attendants always say, put your own oxygen mask on before assisting others. But to the “normal” mind it looks selfish, like every day is an emergency, every conversation a minefield.
The world, it seems, is made for pairs. You want the “we” sometimes, to feel like there is someone else to live for, to be better for. But if you get that far, you’ll always be waiting for the lie to reveal itself-the text you weren’t meant to read, the raised voice condemning you for not doing enough, the locks closing on every door so you can’t get out. Is this what pretty people fear when they go on dating apps? Do neurotypicals on a coffee date take too long to order, trying to determine how each choice could be perceived by the would-be love interest?
Perhaps it is easier to express love when you are not constantly tired, when you can breathe. Perhaps if I fall long enough into the darkness, there will be another hand to hold and seeing them in the dawn will be exciting instead of terrifying. Perhaps if I do what feels right instead of what is expected, I will love myself, if no one else.
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