|
In 1996, Mary Meinel (My wife then, we have since
divorced and remarried) and I were featured on "Sixty Minutes", ironically
while our marriage was in real trouble. The other irony was that we
apparently led some people to believe that the possible solution to
adult autistic isolation is to marry us all off to each other.
There are several flaws to that strategy and the
statistical one, the observed 4/1 male to female ratio is not the biggest
hurdle. After all, we could have reverse polygamy and allow each autistic
female to have four husbands! The main barrier is this: Even if there
was a one-to-one ratio, most men and women with autism are too similarly
challenged to do each other much good as partners. Friends, absolutely-but
marriage? Rarely.
Why is this? I can only offer the collective experience
of my support group, AGUA, aka "Adult Gathering, United and Autistic,"
now in its ninth year. For one thing, AGUA women have had much more
social experience. Most, by the time they risk an AGUA meeting, (and
the "pleasure" of being stampeded by a roomful of clueless autistic
men), all but one so far has had a boyfriend, most have been married
and more than half have had children. Two of AGUA's women are grandmothers.
On the male side, the reverse, in the extreme. Many AGUA men, even in
their thirties and older, haven't had a date or it has been years since
the last one. Girlfriends? Maybe ten percent have had one. Marriage?
Two out of 80 so far, and one was totally suckered into an arranged
marriage by a South American "mail-order bride" scheme, with a woman
who hit the road as soon as her American citizenship was safe, keeping
the ring of course.
Why this difference in experience? Several reasons
bear more research. My crude guess, from what I've heard, is that the
inherent social naiveté of autistic females leads them into liaisons.
They aren't often good ones and the low self-image they share with males
keeps them in bad relationships and marriages for far too long. But
the bottom line is that good or bad, autistic females do get social
experience. Socially, they are light-years ahead of their male peers.
Other autistic traits may work out differently,
according to gender. A passive woman is attractive to many men. A passive
male attracts few women. A shy woman or little girl? No worry. A shy
male? What's wrong with him? Men are still the designated hunters and
women are the prize and that hasn't changed in eons. What if a woman
just wants to talk all night? Your little girl has no eye contact? Good.
She won't flirt her way into a shotgun wedding, at least.
I have never believed the four to one ratio. Autism
is seen more in men because basic autistic traits rub more against accepted
male behavior than they do against accepted female behavior. If a girl
is upset with a lack of order, add to the dollhouse. She can grow up,
marry an Orthodox person and stim on cooking rituals. I mean, who'd
have known? If a guy blows his cool for a similar reason, he is noticed,
big time.
But the ratio, whatever it is, is not the point.
What you have is a social arena where our men, supposed to be leading
the dance, are so scared of trying a step that the women, more experienced
besides, aren't going to put up with that basic difference. If they
want male company, they will find a man who is focused, sincere, tactilely
patient, orderly, and maybe has some oddities that parallel autism,
but who does the expected social things: initiation, follow-up, attention,
mating etc. that scare and baffle my male peers.
Here's my script of a date between an autistic male
and female adult, randomly paired:
She: (thinking to herself: Is he going to try
to touch me? Does he know how and when?)
He: So what do you want to do now?
She: You don't seem to know what you want to do, so I guess I should
go home.
He: (with a sigh of relief) Okay. Or, autistic man, on phone, asking
any woman out:
He: Hello, is Peggy there?
She: Speaking.
He: Uh, uh, uh. . .you wouldn't want to see "Men in Black" with me,
would you?
She: I guess not.
He: Oh. I'll talk to you later. Goodbye.
You may think I am a real creep for posing these
examples, but if we are to change the current reality, we have to face
it. And the present social truth is that grim, if not worse. Most peers
I know won't even get to trying what I described. It's not a lack of
interest in our males. It is just utter cluelessness; too much or too
little. In addition, many get in trouble for staring and other "stalking"
behavior; getting fired, arrested or both.
On New Year's Eve, Mary and I invited AGUA to a
party. Her youngest son visited, en route to another party, with two
lady friends. I never saw a room get sexually excited before. On New
Year's Day, Mary asked the girls what they thought of AGUA. They smiled,
rolled their eyes and said, "No foreplay!"
Mary and I were a definite exception. She showed up at a Halloween party,
very -stressed, on the rebound from some Hollywood lowlife, talking
so loud that AGUA members cowered in the kitchen of the host home, begging
me to quiet Mary down. I talked to her for a while, noticed she at least
knew how to dress like a woman, but so what? I was 45 and, unlike most
peers, never looked -at AGUA meetings as a pickup joint. I thought she
was too interested in herself and tried to talk another member into
asking her out, but of course, he would rather agonize about calling
for a year.
You have to appreciate that many of the present adults, like that 38-year-old
friend of mine, were 'beneficiaries" of intervention, sixties and seventies
style. Not electric shock therapy, they will never get to AGUA. But
about everything else; pepper spray, slaps, shouts and in general, while
they have learned some drills, they are too scared to initiate. They
have learned, all too well, that it is a terrible, terrible thing to
be wrong.
I used to compare some of these people to trained
seals, but most seals have better luck dating.
A month went by. Mary showed up again. This time, she impressed me,
going out of the way to help other people come out of their shell. That
was nice to see. The next day, she called me up and apologized for not
spending more time with me. That's right, she basically asked me out
and the rest is history. Why me? Not for the money. I was a delivery
man and lacked even a car. Looks? Other males looked and dressed better.
It was this: Mary knew that I called the shots in my life. That means
more to a woman than anything else and it is one of the things that
my peers rarely have.
It should not be so extreme with the next generation. I think there
are other reasons. Little boys with autism get teased more. They have
more humiliating experiences. Finally, when it is obvious that none
of the "cures" will work, many are dumped into group homes, where they
sit around, unemployed, pick fights with staff and roommates, destroy
property and learn to hate anyone with autism, including themselves.
If that is your self image, you are socially hopeless.
I feel sorry for a majority of my AGUA male peers. Somehow, thanks to
segregated educational
environments, abusive "therapy", being male and
behind the eight ball to start, many have less social skill than an
average junior high school boy, and much lower self esteem. They drown
in insecurity, indecision and inexperience. Some of the taller ones
find older women to mother! lover them but for most, it is just too
late in life to play social catchup and with every day, it gets later.
So I try to help the upcoming generation and my advice is this:
man or woman, autistic people will be social late bloomers. Most of
us lack superficial stuff that makes people popular in high school or
even college. But as time goes by, our true qualities, honesty, reliability,
sincerity and focus, get more attractive. That goes a long way to explaining
why it took forty six years before my first marriage, even with social
experience more normal than most peers, an above average 10, and an
inclusional education with no aversives.
Things should be better for the next generation, though the odds are
still stacked in favor of relationships at later ages. With earlier,
more positive interventions, more inclusive settings, appropriate inclusion
in interest groups, adult support systems and mentors, it can't get
any worse. But this much is true: we will never marry off our autistic
people.
- If they get married at all and if it is to
be a good marriage, it will only happen after they learn to love themselves
first and seek a complimentary, compatible partner, probably close
to but not in, the Autism Spectrum
|
|