Love Warrior, Glennon Doyle, (c) 2016. Flatiron Publishing. (Goodreads)
I’ve spent my entire life using “pretending really hard” as a strategy.
Now that I know that, I want to tell the truth. But, to do that, I have to first find the truth.
A little truth, to kick us off:
- I realized rather late in life that I have ADHD. It explains my troubles with time blindness, memory, focus and hyperfixation, rejection sensitivity, and maybe 1-2 dozen other things.
- I’m also starting to realize that I’m probably also on the autism spectrum, which would help to account for my intensely picky eating as a kid, my “bossiness” (rigid play), sensory issues, etc.
- I love books. LOVE them.
- I love music.
- I express and receive a lot of love and affection via shared interests. “OMG, me too!” was the herald of many an excellent friendship.
- I got into computers (professionally and re: hobbies) because of timing, and my family.
- Timing: I was a kid when the home computer hit the market. By the time I got to high school, I was able to take both Programming I and II.
- Family: Both parents were computer users, and my older brother was an early-days computer tinkerer.
- I was born somewhere cold and beautiful. I have always loved places that are cold and beautiful.
- I have always wanted to write. I did end up writing a fair amount for my career, but I always imagined I’d write fiction. I haven’t managed to get past a number of mental blocks, yet, to do so.
- My memory has gotten progressively worse as I’ve aged.
- I can account for some of that with ADHD, some of it with hormone changes…but even so, my memory is abysmally bad.
- One of the upcoming projects here will, I hope, be a series of interviews with people who have known me well, and/or for a long time. Just like the book “Brain on Fire: My Month of Madness”, I need to recreate my own history.
And so: How does one spend a lifetime learning to be different, be quiet, be smaller, be less weird, be less you….and then tell the truth? How do you go about finding that out?
I don’t know. Yet.