‘I don’t want to play in the playground!’

One of the things about Aspergers I struggle to explain is that of difficulty expressing emotion. Perhaps this is because I have quite an effective strategy for this now – I write down my feelings regularly, and this helps me process them. The more I do this, the better I become at recognising my emotions. I also have read a great deal of material on psychology, so I can analyse myself and others in the light of this, and gain understanding this way.

Thus I understand myself and others by referring to what I will call catalogues in my brain. I refer to everything I have observed about the person (or myself) and what I’ve observed about people in general, and what I’ve read about pyschology. I find the pieces that fit together. It occurs to me that non-autistic people probably have a different way of understanding themselves and others, and that I have no idea what this way is, because I’ve never heard anyone verbalise it.

Anyway, in order to explore the difficulty people on the autistic spectrum have expressing emotion, I think I need to go back in time to when I was a child, and I had no such strategies. Back to when I was four years old and I’d just started school…

The thing I hated most about school was the playground. It made no sense to me. Well, school as a whole didn’t make sense to me, but the playground made even less sense! Children ran around quite randomly and I saw no point or pattern to the way they behaved. There would always be a teacher standing in the playground, but I didn’t understand why she was there, because she wasn’t telling us what to do. So I had no idea what I was supposed to be doing. The weather was generally damp and uncomfortable for me too. While I could easily amuse myself in a quiet room at home, I felt quite lost and bewildered in a big noisy chilly damp playground where children were running around and behaving in a chaotic way and a teacher was watching us. I had no desire to play with the other children, because their play made no sense and they made no sense.

Bear in mind that I can describe this in retrospect, because I remember it very clearly and I now have the ability to translate thought processes and feelings into words. At the time, I didn’t have this ability. There was just this overwhelming chaotic frightening confusion.

One day at playtime, when I was still very new to school, I observed that the teacher standing there was my class teacher, whom I will call Miss Bailey. There seemed to be a different teacher each day, and this too seemed random and confusing. But now that it was Miss Bailey, I felt that there was something that sort of made sense in the playground. Miss Bailey knew who I was, and I knew who she was. Maybe she could help me.

So I went up to her and started screaming in a distressed way. Not because I was bad or attention seeking, but because I wanted help and I didn’t know how to ask. Despite being very verbal and having good language skills, I couldn’t put into words what the problem was or what help I wanted.

Miss Bailey was used to me screaming. It was a regular occurrence. She found it frustrating (another thing which I realise in retrospect, by analysing the things she would say in response!). She said to me ‘What’s wrong now?’

I screamed louder. Not because her words upset me, but because her words meant that I was being acknowledged, and that she realised that something was wrong. So my louder scream was my response to that – my way of saying ‘Yes, something is wrong – you’re right!’ (Once again, this is something I realise in retrospect, as I put the memory of my feelings into words).

Miss Bailey asked me again what was wrong, and told me to stop screaming and to explain to her what was wrong. I couldn’t explain it, so I just carried on screaming. She started to suggest things to me – Had someone hurt me? Had I fallen over?

‘No!’ I sobbed.

‘Then what’s wrong?’

I actually don’t remember the exact details of what happened next – whether Miss Bailey came up with the idea or whether I came up with it – but I started screaming ‘I don’t want to play in the playground!’

‘Why not?’ she asked.

I had no idea, so I just repeated again and again ‘I don’t want to play in the playground!’ I ran around her in circles, as I cried ‘I don’t to play in the playground! I don’t want to play in the playground!’

Miss Bailey said some things to try to jolly me along, and make playing in the playground sound appealing. She suggested various things I might like to do. I said ‘No’ to them all, and then kept repeating ‘I don’t want to play in the playground!’

Then she came up with a different solution: ‘Do you want to stand with me here?’

I thought about it. If I stood with Miss Bailey then I wouldn’t have to be with all the other children, and I wouldn’t be confused by not knowing what I was supposed to be doing and where I was supposed to be going. I’d just have to stand there. That was easy, and not confusing. ‘Yes,’ I said.

Miss Bailey took my hand, and I stood there holding her hand, and I liked the rest of that playtime.

Playtimes after that were as chaotic and unpleasant as usual – until the next time Miss Bailey was on duty. I was so delighted to see her! I knew exactly what to do this time. I went up to her and started screaming ‘I don’t want to play in the playground! I don’t want to play in the playground!’

‘That’s okay,’ she said. ‘I know you don’t like playing in the playground. Normally this isn’t allowed, but you can go inside and sit in the classroom.’

A surge of panic rose up inside me. That wasn’t what was supposed to happen! That didn’t happen last time. Why had she changed it?

‘Nooo!’ I screamed. ‘I don’t want to play in the playground! I don’t want to play in the playground!’ I kept repeating it, because I knew that last time I’d repeated those words, she’d let me stand with her and hold her hand.

To be honest, if she’d told me to go inside the first day, I’d probably have welcomed it. There was nothing bad about going inside – it was just frightening to me now, because it contradicted the small piece of sense I’d made of the chaotic world around me. I’d discovered – or thought I’d discovered – that if I screamed ‘I don’t want to play in the playground’ then Miss Bailey would let me stand with her and hold her hand during playtime, so playtime didn’t have to be horrible any more. A simple cause and effect thing. A pattern. A way that I could have some sense of control in the mayhem surrounding me.

Poor Miss Bailey didn’t understand all this, of course. ‘I know you don’t want to play in the playground. If you go inside, you won’t be in the playground. You said you don’t want to play in the playground and I’m saying you don’t have to.’

Her voice didn’t sound as warm as last time – last time she’d sounded like she really wanted to help me, but this time she seemed less interested and more frustrated. This confused and frightened me, because it made her seem like a different person. The idea that doing the same thing could elicit two completely different responses from the same person made the world even more unpredictable and terrifying. Of course, in retrospect, I can reason that she’d probably thought about it after the first time, realised I hated the playground, and so wanted to come up with a better solution for me than just standing there holding her hand. But at the time I had no way of working this out. So I screamed and screamed, quite distraught.

I don’t remember the details of the interaction that followed. Miss Bailey tried to find a solution, and eventually realised that I wanted to hold her hand. She let me hold her hand, but, unlike the first time, when she’d been welcoming to me, this time she said, ‘Why didn’t you say that to begin with? If you want to hold my hand, just ask me if you can hold my hand. Don’t scream and say you don’t want to play in the playground. All you had to do was ask me. You can hold my hand now, but you can’t always hold my hand, because sometimes the other children like to hold my hand.’

After that, I never stood beside her and held her hand again. Partly because I was scared by the fact that she’d seemed to change into a different person. Partly because I was confused by the idea of an unreliable hand which other children sometimes held too. I wanted something I could rely on for definite. And partly because, odd though this may seem, I knew I’d never be able to ask her to hold her hand.

This last reason is frustrating to me, looking back, because even now as an adult, I can’t quite explain it. It’s not that I was literally unable to say ‘Can I hold your hand?’ If it had been written in a book, I’d have been able to read it out loud with no problem (I was quite a precocious reader). So logically, it seems to me to be ridiculous that the teacher gave me the very words to say in order to get what I wanted, and yet I couldn’t say them. And yet I can remember the feeling and I know that this inability was very real to me.

I have worked out, though, that it’s to do with expressing feelings. Asking to hold someone’s hand is a question that involves implicit, unspoken feelings – and at four years old I could sense that. However, the feelings aren’t stated in the question, and at four years old, I didn’t understand the feelings. I find that if I’m asking for something (even now as an adult) I feel the need to be able to explain why I’m asking. Had I had, at four years old, the language and reasoning ability I have now, I’d have been able to say to my teacher ‘Look, I find playtime really chaotic and scary, because it makes no sense to me, and so it gives me a sense of security to stand with you and hold your hand.’ That would have been an easier question to ask, emotion-wise. If I’d been able to understand my feelings in the light of what I know now about psychology, they wouldn’t have seemed like strange, overpowering, inexplicable things. But without that understanding, to say something or ask something which involves feelings would be quite terrifying.

Yet surely ‘I don’t want to play in the playground’ also expresses feelings, as does screaming. But the screaming was, to me, a more accurate representation of the feelings I had – chaotic and confusing and wordless. How does one convert such feelings into a quiet, polite ‘Can I hold your hand?’ To me there was no correlation between the question and what I was feeling. And I somehow needed – still need – that correlation. An external integration to make up for the lack of internal integration, maybe.

Anyway, this is my example of difficulty expressing emotions. It’s complex, I think – more complex than it’s portrayed to be. I think it’s probably to do with a need for accuracy and truth – something very important for people on the spectrum, because any deviation from the truth creates confusion. And the trouble with emotions is that they can’t truly be contained by words – they are a different language from words. The analytical part of the brain that analyses with words isn’t the part that feels emotions. Even now, as I write my emotions down regularly to process them, I’m aware that writing them never fully depicts their depth and complexity. I can describe them in a detached, analytical way, but that is not the same as feeling them. There is something intrinsically wordless about emotions.

I think non-autistic people get round this by showing both the emotion and the language together – another form of multitasking! I can only do one or the other. I can explain the emotions in words – which can lead people to think I’m not actually feeling the emotions I’m expressing, because my voice will sound matter-of-fact – or I can express the emotions wordlessly by, say, crying, or getting angry. In this case, I may use words, but have little control over them, so they are disjointed and ineloquent. This does not create a good impression, so I tend to choose the former option.

I have learnt to act. When I am talking with someone else about their emotions, I can do appropriate voice tone and facial expression. I do this because it’s a social convention and people like it, but in reality, I am not feeling feelings at the same time as talking. Not that I don’t feel feelings for others, but I just can’t fully experience feelings and express myself in language at the same time. However, while I do this with others, I never do it when expressing my own feelings. It seems false somehow. When I do it for others, it may in one sense be false, but it’s also a conscious decision to follow a convention that makes the other person feel valued – so it is real from that perspective.  But describing my own emotions is different. It’s more confusing – while people like you to express appropriate emotion over their feelings, they don’t always like you expressing too much emotion over your own feelings. Or rather, there are all kinds of unwritten boundaries, particularly in the UK, where the ‘stiff upper lip’ mentality still remains to some extent, and expressing too much emotion is often seen as indulgent or needy, while expressing too little freaks people out because you seem like a robot.

So, while I’ve learnt how to find words to express emotions, I haven’t yet mastered the art of seamlessly integrating verbal expression of my emotion with wordless expression of my emotion. But still – I’ve come a long way since the age of four!

And now, to conclude, I’m going to think about what would have helped me at four years old – a verbal, intelligent child who somehow didn’t have the words to express emotion. Looking back, I know my teacher wanted to help me – she just didn’t know how. I actually think it would have helped me to have coloured tickets – one colour to say I want to play in the playground, another to say I want to hold the teacher’s hand, and another to say I want to go inside.

The teacher would have had to explain these tickets in detail to me and tell me the exact procedure of how to use them, and then I think I would have really enjoyed such a system. It would have been a simple shorthand to express what I wanted, and to know these were three options which I could choose without having to to understand and explain the feelings behind them. Not that it’s not important to understand and explain feelings, but I think that would have been better developed in a separate non-stressful time, one-on-one with a support teacher (we didn’t have support teachers back when I was a kid, but I’m just thinking what would have worked for me in an ideal world).

I think I’d have needed my teacher to explicitly explain to me that there were different options at playtime – and even to talk about the playing options. If she’d explained to me that different children like to play different things, and that everyone’s different, and if she’d talked to me about the odd sorts of games different children played, whilst making it clear that not everyone likes such games, then I’d have felt less bewildered. I can see the value of Social Stories, which I know are popular now with kids on the autistic spectrum – a social story explaining playtime would have been really helpful.

As for expressing emotions, I can see how pictures of different faces – smiling face, sad face, angry face, etc. – would be very useful for a child. When overwhelmed by emotion and confusion, it’s hard to see through all the overwhelming details of confusion and pinpoint an emotion. Perhaps pictures of faces would act as a sort of prompt – in the way that writing down my thoughts and feelings prompts me as an adult to pinpoint how I’m feeling.

I’ve always found ending blog posts very hard. Everything I write seems to lead to something else, and I always feel the need to clarify further, and give further exampes. Summing up with a neat conclusion seems impossible, because I end up with more questions than answers. So I end up stopping abruptly purely because the post has got far too long! Which I’m afraid I’ll have to do here too. I know this is a huge topic, and my oversized blog post really doesn’t cover it all! But I hope it gives some idea of how and why expressing emotions can be difficult for people on the spectrum.

10 Comments

  1. You’re doing a terrific job with these posts. Yes, they’re long and full of detail, but that’s very useful to those of us who don’t have a lot of experience with autism.

    You Tweeted about whether daily posts are too much. If daily is too much for you, then it’s too much. And if the posts are taking too much of your time (since you’re clearly taking enough time to craft lucid and precise posts), then maybe you need to scale back for your own sake.

    But don’t worry about your readers. We can keep up with whatever you decide to do. Folks may discover your blog months from now and go back to the beginning and just read you right through over a few days or weeks. At that point, it won’t matter whether the entries were posted daily or weekly or some compromise between the two. So don’t burn yourself out trying to post daily if it’s too much for you.

    • I guess I was thinking that if people are busy they might find it hard to keep up with a blog that is updated daily. I’m aware I have more time than a lot of people at the moment as it’s the summer holidays. But yes, it still can be tiring to write a post every day, so I’m updating a bit less often now.

  2. The colored tickets sounds like a fabulous idea!
    That sounds like it could be something that could be adjusted for other children with different needs, but it sounds like it really could have helped.
    It looks like you had a hard time with school – at least, the unstructured part. I remember being overwhelmed by it all, but then again, I had never been an active person, so I spent my recess on the steps, reading or writing.

    But it also appears that the teachers didn’t really “know what to do with you”, so to speak. I wonder if nowadays they would be more equipped to handle someone like you.

    And I know exactly what you mean about ending blog posts. The longer you write, the more it feels like it has to wind up somewhere. But don’t feel that you have to. You can just stop when you are done speaking. There are no rules, except for the ones you inflict upon yourself.

    As usual, I did enjoy reading this and the insight it provided. You seem to be very adept at explaining how the Aspergers affects you.

    • I would have loved to read during recess – or ‘break time’ as we call it here – but for some reason this never occurred to me as a possibility until I was fourteen. When I was little the teachers called it playtime, so I thought I literally had to play – and I had no idea what sort of play I was supposed to do! And we always had to be outside, so reading would have been hard when it was cold and rainy anyway, which it often was. When I was fourteen, I finally plucked up courage to ask my form teacher if I could stay in the classroom and read during break time and she said yes.

  3. I can really relate to this. Just the other day I wrote something about how recess was a very difficult time for me, in the gymnasium in particular because of the lights and noise in addition to the chaos. I couldn’t even recognize and pick out my friends faces in that situation. It didn’t even occur to me to try to ask for any help. I spent those hours focusing on the black line around the gym and walked it the entire recess period.

    I have been meaning to mention to you since I found your blog a couple of weeks ago how much I like it and how much I have been getting out of it. Thank you for writing. I hope that you keep it up.

  4. This was an absolutely excellent blog and it really helped me understand myself and others on the spectrum! I write out all of my feelings also, and you really helped me understand how and why that helps me, so thanks so much. Keep up the blogging and I can’t wait to read more of your work!

  5. Hi Capriwim,

    I am a NT woman who thoroughly enjoyed your post. I was wondering if you could point me in the direction of a post that identifies how you’ve connected language and emotion. If you haven’t already written about it, I would greatly appreciate you messaging me privately through my email. I happen to understand just how difficult it is to articulate emotions for persons with Asperger’s and it is nothing short of a miracle (meant that in a figuritive sense as I am not religious). Thank you in advance for your time.

    -kar0690

  6. Hi, your post made me cry because it reminded me of my son who is 4 now and who I’m convinced is on the spectrum. He is a very bright, articulate gorgeous boy, but he struggles in so many ways. He can’t often identify how he is feeling or why and is often confused by the responses of others. This post gave me an insight into how confusing, lonely and scary it must be to be so misunderstood. I know for a fact he has felt just like you did and I so want to help him. I think reading your blog could help me with that!

  7. Bravo!
    I really appreciate how you are concerned with understanding yourself and your emotions, in order to explain and relate to others. It has given me an insight into how I can improve my interactions with my son (who I think may have aspergers) in a way that is non-agressive and hopefully helpful to him.
    Thank you for wanting to help others.

Leave a reply to Aubrey Cancel reply