Inside and Outside Safety

“If you are silent about your pain, they’ll kill you and say you enjoyed it.”

-Zora Neale Hurston

I think sometimes when we talk about “passing” versus visibility we forget what that really means, what it is really about. We forget that it means a choice between being safe in the out there instead of being safe in the in here.

It’s a process of making a difficult choice for some of us. Which will destroy us sooner- the violence that others do to us or the violence we do to ourselves? How long do we defend ourselves from the violence that other people send us before we end up destroying who we are inside? Can we live in a world where we can be safe in our own heads without endangering ourselves from the violence of others?

A number of people have written about what it is to internalize oppression- ableism in particular. There’s one phrase I’ve seen that always strikes me - “outposts in our heads.” The place I remember coming across it was at Amanda Bagg’s blog, when it was used- along with the Sally Kempton quote- as the title of a post. Outposts in Our Heads was a big deal for me when I first read it back in 2008. It helped me form into language the things I was noticing about my own experiences, my own terrors, my own damages.

When we internalize the messages that tell us we are unreliable narrators of our own stories, that we are “bad” and “wrong” when we exist as ourselves, it creates violence inside of us. It’s not the physical kind of course- though sometimes people do hurt themselves as a result of this “inside” violence. But that makes it no less violence, no less an attack on our beings.

The more I reflect on my own behavior and the writings of others the more I feel as though a lot of our passing comes from this violence that has been pressed inside of us. Our passing is  an expression, in part, of the thousand little insidious things we were taught.  To remind ourselves that we are wrong, that we are “slow.” To remind ourselves that we don’t count as humans unless we take these “lessons” to heart.

With those lessons is one that gets pointed to as the “reason” for them, why it is so “needful” for us to find indistinguishable. Why the parent I will sit next to in a meeting next week will tell me that they just want their kid to have a shot at pretending to be normal. The outside world is violent towards us when we don’t accept these things, sometimes in more obvious ways.

I don’t think we have to go far to “prove” them their theory on how unsafe it is for us. Neli Latson‘s arrest- Young, black, and Autistic Neli- is proof in an of itself, however much it is also tangled up in racism. The bullying of kids who rock and flap are constantly held up against the bullying of queer youth by some parents, the violence that both populations face sometimes used to outline how bad it is not to pass. Sometimes I even hear the statistics about how 70% of women with developmental disabilities experience rape and that is used as an example of why we shouldn’t be obviously disabled. (Sometimes I even hear this from people who would fiercely remind you that how a person dresses or what they drink doesn’t make them responsible for the violence done to them.)

These things are brought out time and again, these dangers of the world. And too often- particularly when it is our families rather than disabled people ourselves- the solution offered is to teach us to pass. To not behave or exist as we are. To make eye contact and don’t flap or rock in public or don’t jump at loud sounds.

The solutions offered to individuals too often aren’t to make it so police know what to expect from Autistics (as well as unknowing the stereotypes of race), to end bullying through truly inclusive practice, to teach people not to rape and sexually assault people.

We are told that in order to save ourselves from the violence out there we must do everything we can to look normal out there.

And when we do look normal out there, they pretend that no violence is being done to us. Too often, they forget the violence that they did or dismissed to make us this way. Too often, they will always dismiss that it left us with violence in our heads.

As time goes on I try to unlearn the violence that was taught to me. I try to uproot the strongholds that tell me how wrong and bad it is of me, how selfish, to want to be okay with myself. This process isn’t helped by living in a society that reaffirms that all the bad things are because I’m wrong, I’m deviant, I’m disabled and I dare to try not to hide from it.

In June, I attended the Allied Media Conference as a Co-track Coordinator of the Disability Justice Track with A’ishah of ResistDance. Admittedly there were huge chunks of things that were issues in the physical world- for example, some people not getting what “scent free” meant, or staff members forgetting that sharpies can be toxic for some folk, or how incredibly echoy and not sensory friendly having closing ceremony in McGregor was. But the biggest thing for me had nothing to do with my external environment.

It had everything to do with my internal one. I was working so hard at uprooting the ableism inside of me, and yet while I was there surrounded by movers and shakers and hopeful justice makers I found more. I spent a couple of hours one afternoon sitting in a corner, crying and rocking and holding my arms tight. My outside was safe enough- someone even gave me a tissue as they passed. But on my insides the violence I had worked so hard to uproot from my mind was taking over.

I was alone and unworthy and bad girl. Of course you are having a hard time, I thought, you are wrong at the most basic level. Remembered directives of Stop Crying and This is for Attention isn’t it? and You are selfish for wanting to be safe and everyone knows that retards can’t lead.

I eventually got settled enough to move, to look for my mum in the Healing Justice Practice Space. When I got there, though, it was obvious in ways I couldn’t know that there was a violence happening inside of me to some of the healers. I had some tea, and Mariposa had me do medicine on my self by way of chalking protection at my wrists. It is protection from the elements of the outside that give power to the violence inside, she told me.

And I did come back to me, to knowing that I am worthy and human and deserving of existance. To knowing where those thoughts were pressed into me from. To knowing that it is a violence taught to me.

I won’t discount that the violence outside of me is painful. I can’t pretend that I wasn’t devastated when the neighbor shot my cat Tribble knowing that he was in training to be my therapy cat. I will never deny that there’s still a spot on my back that when pressed makes me panic, to think that my mother’s second (ex)husband is going to put me in prone restraint again. But I think that the most devestating is the ways that violence is pressed inside of me.

I’m tired of doing violence to myself inside of me to avoid the violence that could happen outside of me. I’m tired of having no safe place inside of me because someone might believe that the demonstrations of my disabled person-ness gives them license to grant violence to the external face of me. I don’t think it’s right to give in to demands that I pretend that passing doesn’t hurt me.

This afternoon, I’ll go shopping. At checkout, while I’ll smile at the register and answer questions from the check out person, chances are I won’t make eye contact. Chances are I’ll startle when someone shouts or drops something. Chances are I’ll flap in line, wander in a way someone else’s parent would characterize as aimless and pathological, cover my face or eyes or ears when things are “too much,” flinch when someone touches me in passing unexpectedly. I’ll stare and not be able to process a shelf display or two, and forget how much I need to get some bottled water because it looks like there’s so much stuff in the cart already.

And I will  be safe.

_________

This Post was inspired in part by “Dear ‘Autism Parents’” by Julia Bascom, as well as other writings of her’s at Just Stimming. I highly recommend going over there and reading more of her stuff. I also want to direct people to the writings of Amanda Forest Vivian at A Deeper Country whose writings have been helping to “percolate” these thoughts all summer.

Savannah Logsdon-Breakstone blogs at Cracked Mirror in Shalott.

Inside and Outside Safety appears here by permission.

[image via Flickr/Creative Commons]


on 09/7/11 in featured, Society | 3 Comments | Read More



Comments (3)

 

  1. Gwen McKay says:

    Welcome, Savannah — I hope to see more of your writing here at Shift Journal. I found this article very moving, and very much something that needed to be said.

  2. Aaron says:

    Damn: 70 percent of women with ‘developmental disabilities’ experience rape - while I am not completely shocked, what an epic reminder of where the generalized context of the violence in society. It’s one thing to be an “other”, quite another to be a “lesser”. Unfortunately, the aggression of the different levels on the pyramid often shakes down to those who are “lesser/others”, to the untouchables, really. I have been reading about the participation of India’s Untouchable Caste along with Mahatmas Ghandi and the Satragayha movement. Many “autistics” are somewhat egoless, holding themselves together with a lot of tension because they are sponges. Whether we like it or not I think it is up to the ones who sap up all of the negative energy to become fully conscious of ourselves and, ultimately of self/other. We are the ones we have been waiting for/as the Hopi beatude goes, we are the ones who are capable of exercising free will. Sexual violence is epidemic throughout our society, and it inevitably intercepts and damages the most vulnerable populations in ways that reflect the running hierarchy. Immigrant women, homosexuals, and the developmentally other are some of the ones who frequently receive the most sexual abuse. Abuse seems to pile on top of the abused! The other day I happened to meet the assistant superintendent of instruction for washington state (education). This was an outlandish synchronicity, me and a powerful female friend (both of us asbergian trans-self/advocates) happened to be avoiding the loud music coming from a protest (to protect the right of people to play music downtown, “busking”) in the park by hanging out across the street where the education superintendent’s offices were. A woman in professional attire came out of the building and started talking to us.
    She was the assistant superintendent. It happened that she was the mother of an asbergian child who had been told many times that he was going to fail in life… by the school system.

    She queried, “can you imagine what it would be like to have a kid in school who with a disability - and is a person of color?”.

  3. @ Gwen: Thank you!

    @Aaron: There are some great blogs out there by PoC Autistics. (And more and more I’m finding myself admiring the writings of trans* Autistics too…) Unfortunately they don’t get enough press. Too much of Autistic Blogging still centers the white cis-man perspectives, or on confronting the white middle class mommy blogging that Autism blogging has been flooded by.

    Sexual Violence is One of many different forms of violence that we find ourselves vulnerable to as Autistics, people with disabilities, people with Queer Identities, people living in poverty, etc. (I only listed the ones that apply to me.) But here in Westren culture, it is one of the forms of violence that we are most likely to have a gut reaction to.b

Leave a Reply