Life derailed
I’ve written before about how my daily routine is on railway tracks, and that when something comes along that alters the course of my day, I’ll find that I want to continue down those tracks rather than modify my routine to the new schedule.
Well, I’ve recently figured out that the whole bigger picture of my life is like that too.
You see, I grew up in a neurotypical world, with neurotypical expectations, hopes and dreams. I knew I was a little different from the norm, but I really didn’t see how big this chasm was in certain areas until very recently. Thus, neurotypical expectations felt normal and right for me. I had places to get to and things to do. After leaving school there was University to look forward to, and then a life of work, making my way up the career ladder. Somewhere along the way I expected to gain a wife, kids and progressively bigger and more comfortable houses to live in. I was expecting to lead a typical middle-class British life.
In some ways I did. I went to university, and got a good degree. I migrated into the world of work without too much pain either, and made an impression on people for providing the results they asked for. Indeed, it took several years before it became apparent that not everything was as plain sailing as I thought it would be.
I guess the wheels started to come off the wagon when, three years into my work life, I broke up with my girlfriend of six years. Sadly, the relationship had deteriorated in a way that left us as friends and little more. I decided it was over, and we parted company – the one and only time in my life where I’ve ended a relationship. In a neurotypical way I imagined that once I was out of this relationship, I’d meet someone else in due course. But I didn’t – not for several years. Instead I failed miserably to get my act together.
And then there was work. I’d been getting into trouble either for being too outspoken (something that I’ve written about before), and occasionally for not knuckling down and working hard when it was needed. I had developed an eye for seeing the ridiculous and unjust in the work environment, but had poor control over voicing my opinions. I was no longer the model employee that people turned to to get things done. I was the loose cannon that took a bit more managing than my peers, though with management I still produced good results most of the time, and was still valued.
Instead of trying to understand why life wasn’t going as planned, and trying to sort out my working problems, I pulled a trick that you can get away with when you work in IT in the UK – I moved jobs – sometimes within the company, and at other times to other companies. I was in a repeating cycle of joining a team full of enthusiasm, taking on responsibility and delivering on it initially, then starting to see the problems in the company, getting stressed, moaning about it inappropriately, failing to deliver what I said I’d do and then moving on once more.
After six years and six jobs in three companies I was a senior technician, well paid, but out of control. In the last months of my third job I was given a junior management role that involved looking after a track of work, and four technical staff. It went badly wrong, and I left the company, and ultimately my whole working life in London behind.
A big problem for me was that I could see my peers doing well. Many of them grew up with the same middle class values and aspirations as me, and I watched them climb the corporate ladder. That step into junior management that I found impossible was typically tackled by my peers with ease. Why couldn’t I do it? Why was the whole process of people management so intolerably stressful to me?
In the months leading up to work exploding, I’d been introduced by an old friend to a lovely woman who lived and worked in the town where I had grown up in Yorkshire. Our relationship was going well, so I left London behind, and followed my girlfriend (later to be my wife) back to Yorkshire. After six months of doing very little, I took up work again, in a much less senior technical role. That worked better, and for a while I consoled myself that I ‘just wasn’t ready’ for a management position, but that in time I would be.
A little over a year ago the chance arose for me to become departmental manager for the company I was at the time working for – to fill the boots of someone who was leaving. I walked away and left the company. I knew that I wouldn’t be able to hack it.
Where had my middle class dreams gone?
Well, these days, of course, I know the answer. My aspirations of climbing the corporate ladder, and everything that goes along with that typical middle class existence are the dreams of a neurotypical person. I’m simply not neurologically cut out for management, and – lets be honest here – I never will be. I don’t understand office politics and I come across as being hopelessly naive and optimistic a lot of the time, and lazy and rude at others. I now know and accept this.
Why then can’t I accept that my dreams of having a typical middle-class lifestyle simply aren’t going to happen? Well, it’s like I said at the top – my aspirations have been derailed, but my train wants to keep on going in that familiar straight line, chasing the dream that I can’t possible achieve. I’m finding this dream surprisingly difficult to shake, and reality difficult to accept.
The gulf between dream and reality shows itself frequently to me in every day life. I work with smart people, who run their own businesses, and know others, younger than me, who are doing very well in management. I live in an affluent village, and see other parents dropping their kids at school from large new expensive cars. I see the large new cars parked outside large houses too. This is the lifestyle that I was brought up to expect, and yet I can’t realistically hope to have it.
Does that matter? Yes – it feels as though it does.
But does it really matter? No. Look at what I have achieved. I have a lovely and very underastanding wife, and two great kids. As a family we live in a modest but large enough house in a lovely village. We eat well and can afford to run two cars (albeit old and small ones), and have enough spare cash for the odd treat. What’s more, because I understand and accept my limitations and their causes these days, I am in a good position to make work choices in the future that fit my skills better. Whilst I can be a trouble maker at work, I’m also generally good at delivering the sort of results that people want as long as I’m well managed, and with a bit of practice maybe I can keep the trouble maker at bay now that I know what triggers his appearance.
Life is good. Now if only I could get my train to take the branch line off to the left that leads to Satisfaction rather than going straight on towards Middle-class Central…
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4 Responses to “Life derailed”
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Saja on June 22nd, 2009 Saja(Quote)
Well-written post, James. I like the way you describe your expectations as being a railway track, and even when you’ve realized they aren’t going where you need to go, you tend to want to continue in the same direction. I can very much relate. The past five years (since I discovered I’m autistic) have been an undulating series of “wow!” moments where I recognize myself and want to give myself space to be who I am, and “okay, back to our regularly scheduled programming” moments where I keep on keeping on.
I suppose it just takes quite a bit of time to let go of the old railway line and take up a new one. Eventually we’ll find the one headed to Satisfaction!
James on June 24th, 2009 James(Quote)
Saja,
I hope so!
I think that part of the difficulty is that conveying how this all works to neurotypical people such as my wife, is actually very difficult for me. It’s also difficult for her to see things from an Autistic perspective.
By way of example, my wife thinks (and frequently says) that she thinks I just need to get over my discovery of AS and move on. She’s not being hurtful or unkind with this sort of remark – she just sees it from a non-AS perspective, where something difficult comes along, you deal with it, and then move onto the next task. To complete the picture she always pre-qualifies these remarks these days, by saying “I know you can’t, but…”
So I don’t just have to battle my own neurotypical aspirations, but also the neurotypical ways of working that other people have, and their neurotypical expectations of me. This isn’t a complaint – merely an observation.
Anyway, I’m rambling…
Rachel on June 22nd, 2009 Rachel(Quote)
James, I can relate to so much of what you’ve written here. Every now and again I torture myself by looking up old classmates on the Internet and finding out what New and Successful and Incredibly Important things they’re doing. A few of them are even Famous. I mean, Really Famous. And one of the Most Famous ones is a musician who told me in high school that I had great talent, and that I just needed to have more confidence in myself. And yet here I sit, with a rather modest life and even more modest aims.
But you know what? I finally have a life that’s suited to who I am. What I’ve really wanted most in life, when you take out all the “I’m so smart, I can do anything” riff, is to have a loving partner, a great kid, a house that’s mine, and time to write. And I’ve succeeded. So I can’t complain (even though I do sometimes).
James on June 24th, 2009 James(Quote)
Rachel,
I’d dearly love to get myself into a position where I had a life that I’m suited to. This is a new realisation though, so I still have a long way to go to figure out just what that is, and how I go about getting there along with my family.
As per the article, at the moment my train is still heading down the same old track, whilst I try and figure out how to change the points up ahead…