Tag: neurodivergent

  • From Masking to Living: The Power of Embracing Authenticity

    From Masking to Living: The Power of Embracing Authenticity

    Alright, let’s talk about masking.

    What Is Masking?

    If you’re autistic, chances are you’ve been doing it your whole life, maybe without even realizing it. I didn’t. I just thought I was really good at adapting. Masking is basically when autistic people consciously or unconsciously hide parts of themselves to fit social expectations.

    Honestly, I spent years trying to be the perfect version of “normal.” Which is hilarious now, because I’ve finally realized there is no such thing as normal. Everyone masks to some extent. People have their “friend” mask, their “job interview” mask, their “meeting the in-laws” mask. The version of you in Vegas with your friends is probably not the exact same version showing up at a serious business meeting pretending to know what “synergy” means.

    When Masking Becomes Survival

    The difference is autistic masking often goes way beyond that. For me, it was survival.
    I could jump between groups like a social chameleon. Sports team? Nailed it. Top grades? Yep. Party girl? Oh, absolutely. But looking back, it felt less like being myself and more like method acting.

    Costume. Script. Rehearsed lines. Cue the awkward fake laugh.
    It wasn’t until a couple years ago, and yes, I’m 42 now, that I was intensively diagnosed:

    Autistic.

    Which honestly explained… basically everything.
    Looking back, I had different versions of myself for different people. It wasn’t fake because the personalities were all still me. But they were edited versions. Carefully filtered versions. Socially acceptable versions.

    I rehearsed everything.

    • How to talk
    • How long to make eye contact
    • How to laugh without sounding weird
    • How to stand
    • How to exist without attracting attention

    The Exhaustion of Performing Normal

    Apparently there are all these unspoken social rules everyone else just magically understands. Meanwhile I’m over here trying to calculate the correct amount of eye contact like it’s a hostage negotiation.

    Too much eye contact? Creepy.
    Too little? Suspicious.
    Perfect amount? Who knows. Apparently neurotypical people are born with this information pre-installed.
    And small talk? Absolutely not.

    “How about this weather?”
    Sir, I do not care about the weather. I care about why grocery stores rearrange aisles without warning and how spreadsheets are unfairly underrated.

    Masking is basically showing up to social situations pretending everything feels natural when internally you’re running a full emergency operating system.

    You nod at the right moments. Smile on cue. Throw in a “haha totally” every few minutes so people know you’re alive. Meanwhile your brain is busy replaying every sentence you’ve said since 2007.

    • Did I sound rude?
    • Too excited?
    • Too monotone?
    • Was that joke weird?
    • Was that hug too long?
    • Did I accidentally beep boop like a malfunctioning robot during conversation?

    And the wild part is people often think you’re okay socially.

    Meanwhile you leave the interaction mentally, emotionally, and physically exhausted like you just completed customer service during Black Friday.
    Because masking is exhausting.

    It’s not just pretending to like small talk or forcing eye contact. It’s wearing a mask over your entire identity. After enough years, you don’t even know where the performance ends and you begin.

    And honestly? That part gets lonely.

    You can have friends. You can look social. But deep down, it feels like nobody fully knows you because you’re constantly adjusting yourself to match the room.
    Internally? Absolutely fighting for your life in a loud restaurant while pretending you’re fine.

    Learning to Unmask

    But things changed for me once I started unmasking.
    Not in some dramatic movie scene where I suddenly became my authentic self overnight. It was slower. Awkward. Slightly chaotic.

    More like:
    “You know what? I’m just going to be honest.”
    And then five minutes later accidentally explaining my deep emotional connection to dual monitors.

    Unmasking doesn’t mean throwing all social rules out the window and becoming a feral raccoon. It just means letting yourself exist without performing quite so hard all the time.

    It means saying:

    • “I’m overwhelmed.”
    • “I need quiet for an hour.”
    • “I actually don’t enjoy crowded places.”
    • “I’m exhausted and my brain is done processing humans today.”

    And surprisingly? The right people understand.

    Now I have people around me I don’t fully mask with. People I can actually say things to like:
    “Hey, I need an hour alone listening to music because my brain feels like 47 browser tabs playing different sounds.”
    And instead of judging me, they just go:
    “Okay.”

    Honestly, the more I stopped performing, the more comfortable life became.
    Turns out being yourself uses way less energy than trying to manually operate a human simulator 24/7.
    And the funniest part? People usually like the real version of you better anyway.

    What Unmasking Looks Like for Me

    So here’s to unmasking.

    • To stim toys
    • To noise-cancelling headphones
    • To accidentally info-dumping about spreadsheets, water shoes, paddleboards, or whatever your current obsession is
    • To leaving events early
    • To needing recovery time after socializing
    • To finally realizing different doesn’t mean broken

    Because at the end of the day, it’s a lot easier to exist when you stop treating your personality like a customer service job

    And honestly?

    I’m way less tired now, and I have people around who know and like the actual me, not just the version I thought I had to perform.

    If you’re anything like me, maybe try unmasking, even just a little bit at a time. You might be surprised how much lighter life feels.

  • My Brain Is Basically a Live-Action Spreadsheet

    My Brain Is Basically a Live-Action Spreadsheet

    (And That’s Why My Reviews Are Brutally Honest)

    You ever see one of those movies where the main character zones out, and suddenly a thousand glowing charts, maps, and floating images appear mid-air?

    Yeah… that’s my brain.

    Except I’m not solving quantum physics in a high-tech lab. I’m standing in a hotel bathroom calculating:

    • Is the toilet paper too scratchy for neurodivergent skin?
    • Will this fan noise trigger a sensory meltdown… or be the white noise of my dreams?
    • Does the shower have decent water pressure but zero grip. AKA a slippery death trap?
    • Is that smell lemon fresh… or lemon chemical warfare?
    • Will the lighting give me a migraine?
    • Will I cry if this bed is too firm?
    • Can I actually use the access ramp, or is it just there for show?

    For context, this is what I’m really doing when I walk into a space:

    • I’m scanning for sensory overload triggers in real time
    • I’m mentally evaluating whether a space is accessible and comfortable for autistic and disabled travelers
    • I’m breaking down environments into practical, real-world travel decisions most reviews don’t mention
    • I’m looking for things like noise levels, lighting, textures, smells, and safety details

    These are the kinds of details I look for when reviewing hotels and travel spaces for sensory accessibility and autistic-friendly travel.

    Welcome to my world.

    I’m autistic, observant, analytical, and brutally honest not by choice, just by default. I’ve always seen the details most people miss. The pros and cons. And then the pros of the cons. And the cons of the pros. And the “what ifs” that turn pros into cons if X, Y, or Z happens. And yes, I’ve got a backup plan if that con-of-a-pro becomes another con that leads to an unexpected pro.

    It’s like if a decision tree and a crime investigation wall had a baby. With yarn. In 4D. That updates in real time.

    It’s hard to explain, but somehow it all makes perfect sense in my head.

    This is how I move through the world. Every situation becomes a flowchart. Every outing, hotel, idea, thought, word, event, or product gets analyzed. Not because I want to overthink, I just do.

    But here’s the upside: if you’re neurodivergent, sensitive to sensory input, or just want the honest, real-world breakdown before spending money or stepping out the door, I’ve already done the thinking for you. I’ve charted and graphed it and then reanalyzed it.

    Here’s the thing:

    I don’t just review things because it’s fun (though I do love a good Excel chart).
    I do it because:

    • I know how hard it is to find places that work for people like me.
    • I want to make travel easier for autistic and disabled people.
    • And let’s be honest, I’d be an amazing consultant if someone ever paid me.

    But until then, I’ll be here, testing products, paddling new lakes, checking the soap smell at every hotel I visit, and telling you exactly what works, what doesn’t, and what I wish someone had told me before I booked it.

    Because you deserve honest, detailed reviews.
    And I literally can’t not notice this stuff.