Masking, and a Story of a Spoken Poem

This is an article by Mark Berry

autistic masking blog

Just a bit of Background to this

I was sitting at my desk the other day, trying to come up with a million more interesting things I could do instead of the boring task I was supposed to be doing, that’s ADHD dual diagnosis for you!

Anyway, out of nowhere came the idea of writing a poem about Autistic Masking.  Don’t ask me where it came from because I have no idea, other than the fact I feel masking is a significant part of my being, it’s who I am…………………. or not!?

I firmly believe masking is the reason, I have a job and I am reasonably successful at it. It is also a significant reason why I have been married for 30 years (to a wonderful, sympathetic and understanding wife). 

However, it has and still is a significant contributor to many of my mental health issues.

So let me set the scene here, I do not do literature or poetry, I don’t understand the language, I do not understand why people pour over text looking for hidden meaning.  To me, if it says Fred did ‘A’ because of ‘B’, then that’s what it means.  It doesn’t mean Fred did ‘X’, or the real reason was ‘Z’ and certainly doesn’t mean it wasn’t Fred after all, but Jim.  You get my drift.

I have never written a poem before unless forced to do so in school, and certainly not in the intervening 44 years.  My previous attempts were, let’s say, poor, and that’s being generous.

Nevertheless, I proceeded to get some thoughts down and the ‘I don’t mean to’ theme quickly emerged. I won’t say any more at this stage because I don’t want to spoil the reveal. On reading some of the partial drafts to my wife, I realised the poem worked better if it was read aloud, rather than from the page. Maybe because it was pants?

Despite my reservations about the quality of the prose, I wanted to share the poem with a few select friends, allowing them to understand my struggles with masking and its consequences. I decided that a video would be the best way to share, displaying the words as I said them. The autistic geek in me also enjoyed the technical challenge of working out how to do it.

Moving on a few more days, having shared it with a few people, I found they liked the video, and I was persuaded to share with a wider audience, and here it is!  I also unilaterally decided to add some further thoughts on masking rather than just plonking a video on the page with no context.

What follows is by no means extensive, and I seriously had to stop myself going full autistic info dump.  But thank you Ruth and Deborah for allowing me a late shot at fame (or will it be infamy, we will find out).

My Spoken Word ‘Poem’ About My Experience of Masking

Let’s Clear Some Things Up

Please note everything contained here is my opinion/experience and does not mean it is the view of Aspire.

Please also note I am not that hung up on language I have no preference for being referred to as a person with autism or an autistic person, or normal vs neurotypical vs neurodivergent.  I will therefore use the terms interchangeably.  I have bigger problems to worry about,

What is Masking?

Some will already know that Masking (or camouflaging as it is also known) is a common ‘feature’ of Autism. 

For me, this is a conscious/subconscious suppression of autistic traits, and the development and use of techniques and approaches to social interaction, in an effort to appear neurotypical.…………..or ‘acting normal’, if you prefer a snappier but potentially more controversial phrase.

You can argue it is a trauma response aimed at protecting yourself from the ongoing risk of further rejection, discrimination, stigma, etc. from a world that is not geared up to cope well with difference.

Masking and Me

I was diagnosed with Aspergers at age 42 and I am now 60.  Even after diagnosis, I didn’t know I was masking until probably into my 50s as my self-awareness grew alongside the information available, primarily on the internet.

On reflection, I had probably been masking subconsciously for 50 years or so from a very early age, in an unconscious response to messages I was getting from people around me. 

Until recently, I honestly thought everyone else was doing the same, just that they did it much better than me.

My masking largely comprises a mental spreadsheet that I use to drive behaviour.  I have heard other autistic people call it a list, or a list of rules, or scripts etc.   However, all the descriptions I’ve heard used, all boil down to the same basic thing, a list composed of rules or scenarios and an appropriate response to each one.

In other words, I intellectualise social interaction, virtually nothing is real or spontaneous, because spontaneous means ‘off script’, and ‘off script’ (life has taught me) is when things go wrong. Going wrong means I say or do something that reveals I am an alien in a neurotypical world and it usually ends in embarrassment, shame or a telling-off of some sorts. When I find a response I have made is ‘wrong’, I work out why, and amend my spreadsheet.

I mentally rehearse conversations. My wife often catches me unconsciously mouthing what I am going to say.  Whole conversations are planned, how they might develop, what the to and fro might be and what the potential paths and responses might look like etc.  Heaven forbid that the conversation develops in a direction I am not prepared for, because that means I am off script and we know what can happen when things go off script.

I often joke that ‘if you ask a question I am not expecting, don’t be surprised if you get an answer you’re not expecting’.  There was a perfect example of this when I was helping to deliver one of the courses and Ruth asked me a question just as I was mentally preparing to give my section of the course.  My panicked blunt response to a perfectly reasonable question and one I could answer easily under different conditions took Ruth and the delegates back.  I was able to reflect a few minutes later and give a proper response, but I wish I could have bottled that moment because it was such a perfect demonstration of an ‘off script’ moment and what can happen.

The spreadsheet also explains why I sometimes take a while to respond or I speak in a very measured and considered way, because this mental process of finding the rule/scenario and planning conversations takes time and effort.  This whole process is exhausting, and I often need to decompress at the end of the day when my resources are totally depleted. 

I can cope relatively well with the work environment because it is more predictable and I am unlikely to be asked random questions, but I am still exhausted at the end of the day and need to decompress. Social situations are more challenging, and I often have to take a short time-out to recharge. My friends and immediate family know this and accommodate my time outs. Work events immediately after the working day are the worst, with no end of day decompression to recharge I can struggle. These days, I may sometimes find excuses not to attend.

Advantages of Masking

Avoiding: trauma, stigma, prejudice, shame, discrimination, rejection, physical and mental harm etc.

I personally believe that; to get a job, climb the corporate ladder, be in a relationship and generally survive in the world not geared up for me, it is necessary to mask, and be good at it.  In addition to this, masking provides a platform for better socio-economic outcomes, having friends and outside interests etc. better/easier access to other services such as health, and of course financial independence from a working.

Disadvantages of Masking

Of course, this is absolutely not a zero cost strategy.  There are significant downsides associated with masking. Increased instances of anxiety, depression, low self-esteem, suicide, burnout, meltdowns, breakdowns etc.

Some people decide the benefits do not outweigh the disadvantages, who’s to say what the right answer is, where does the balance lie between better socio-economic outcomes and wellbeing?  Please note, I do recognise self-employment as a potential avenue for achieving both beneficial outcomes.

I also believe Masking is the single biggest contributor to late diagnosis (or being lifelong undiagnosed), misdiagnosis and non-diagnosis. The better you are at hiding in plain sight the less likely you are to be ‘spotted’ by the medical profession. A profession already woefully under trained in autism and as a result, related mental health issues such as depression or anxiety are treated as stand alone. If you get beyond that, then a world of GAD, Bipolar, BPD etc misdiagnosises potentially awaits. If you do manage to get a unicorn NHS Autism assessment then ‘makes eye contact’, ‘has friends’, ‘is in a long-term relationship’, are commonly seen as reasons that back up non-diagnosis. Both misdiagnosis and non-diagnosis can have devastating and potentially dangerous consequences (e.g. psychotropic drugs) as well as long lasting implications. BPD and Bipolar will always be on your medical notes, and it’s quite well documented that ‘structural stigma’ can affect access to other medical, yet unrelated, services.

Conclusion

Society is getting better, but we are far away from the point where people like me feel they don’t NEED to mask and where I am accepted for who I am, where my quirks and faux pas are understood and where I am ‘given some slack’, remember, “I don’t mean to”.

I sometimes envy those who say to the world, “here I am, I don’t care what you think, accept me as I am.  I choose not to mask and accept the consequences of not doing it”. But I will probably never join their ranks.

2 Comments

  1. kate Graham on May 9, 2024 at 10:08 am

    this is so moving and explains it so well. Thank you Mark (and Deborah and Ruth)

  2. Zara Turner on May 21, 2024 at 5:56 pm

    This is utterly brilliant. It should be sent to the pastoral support team of every school in the country. Mark reads it beautifully; with truth and feeling that are totally authentic and it really is wonderful to listen to And very moving too. It resonated deeply with family members who are on the autistic spectrum, and it absolutely deserves as wide an audience as possible.

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