queer-with-a-pen

my autism and me

my mother tells me she
just thought i was
quirky 

like the head tilt that
didn’t go away until i
got glasses at eight years old,
and then was “four eyes” up until
high school graduation

like how, still as a child
i would count the words in
every sentence before speaking,
and if the amount wasn’t an even
number i would hit myself until
the skin of my small hands
was a bright and angry red

like the head-shaking,
hand-wringing, knuckle and
finger-bend-biting, gentle swaying side
to side like a videogame character
waiting to be chosen

like how my mom told me,
mid-20s when it didn’t hurt quite so much,
that she went to the elementary school principal
because she ‘thought there was something
wrong with her son, and should he be
tested for autism?’

but no, they told her, don’t worry
he’s fine, he’ll grow out of it,
and by the time that it had been admitted
girls could have autism, i wasn’t
even a girl anymore

but i wasn’t fine, and i 
didn’t grow out of it, and that 
quirkiness became a length of rope,
just enough for a noose

and i was quirky and an
old soul, but in that polite way that
adults mean to say that there’s something
wrong with you

and i was sixteen then,
stilly quirky and an old
soul, and standing behind a thin
paper curtain in the first of two years
of psychiatric wards, handing a nurse
my boxers with the pad still in it,
stained with blood

but no, the hospital couldn’t give me
birth control to stop the periods that
caused gender dysphoria so bad i
had to make myself bleed in other ways to cope,
because they were a religious institution

and my stomach still hurt from the pills
when the doctor i was forced to meet with,
crombury, rhymes with cranberry,
told me that i wasn’t actually transgender,
silly girl,
it’s just a diversion tactic

still don’t know what i was diverting from,
and he never did clarify, but i sure
must be in it for the long con now, huh?

and there was something wrong with me,
likely still is, since i never did outgrow 
that autism, just got told i was too
high functioning to be diagnosed, to get
any supports

and i was quirky,
an old soul,
and not like other girls, but worse,
and then not even a girl at all

and the adults would smile and
say these things, because they couldn’t
just say there was something 
wrong with me

and sure that builds character,
or whatever,
but it’s the kind of character that makes
you weird at parties

and i’m real fuckin’ tired of
being weird at parties