9 to 5
By HarryC
- 2760 reads
Work is clearly an issue for many people with Asperger's Syndrome. Often, even finding a job at all can be a struggle. Then staying in one – and getting employers to adjust to our needs. Finding something congenial to our condition, too, is never easy. According to figures from the National Autistic Society, only 16% of autistic adults in the UK are in full-time paid employment, and only 32% are in some kind of paid work (The Autism Employment Gap, 2016).
When I look back over my working life, I suppose I’ve been quite fortunate compared to some. I started work after leaving school early at 15 and have generally been in employment, of some form or other, ever since. That’s over 40 years. I took 3 years out to do a degree in my late 20s, but got straight back into work afterwards. I’ve had some short periods of unemployment, usually following redundancies. I also took a year out to care for my mother full-time during her final illness, and then to recover after her death. I still haven’t fully recovered, 18 months on. I doubt I ever will. She was my closest-living human being. Her loss is huge. I feel alone without her. But I have my dear cat, Daisy, here with me. She keeps me going. I’m moving forwards, slowly.
I’ve also had a fair bit of time away from work due to ill-health. About 3 years, if I add it all up. All of it has been mental health-related, and the majority of it has been during the last 12 years. I’ve no doubt that it has all been connected to my then-undiagnosed autism (I got my diagnosis 3 years ago, at age 56). I have no doubt, too, that much of it has been caused by work-related issues. Stress, bullying… and general difficulty with having to be with other people for a good part of my day: people I wouldn’t otherwise have chosen to be with. I soon find it exhausting being around other people for long periods of time. It isn't about being anti-social. It's just that I miss so many social cues, and usually end up side-lined - so I have to make an extra effort to 'fit in'.
All in all, though, I’ve generally worked – and, up until my current job, always full-time. I now work just 4 days a week. It’s care work, so it’s minimum wage – but I make enough to get by and cover everything. People are astonished when I say I manage well on less than £12k a year. I don’t have luxuries. But I don’t really need them. I like my life to be simple and uncluttered. I couldn’t cope with it any other way. I need that work/life balance, too. More of my time is my own.
I did a tally the other day. Since I started work, in 1975, I’ve had 24 contracted jobs. Discounting my university years, that’s an average of 1.66 years per job. The shortest time I was in a job was 2 weeks. The longest – 7 years. The 7-year one – my first after university – was working in a wholefood shop. I kept it for so long because I loved being there. It was the first place I’d worked where I felt I truly ‘fitted in’ because I was working with people on my wavelength: artists, musicians, writers, environmental activists, hunt sabs, anarchists, hippies, radicals, intellectuals. Society drop-outs. People who didn’t ‘fit in’ to the mainstream. It was the first time I’d found such a congenial bunch of people. This was, of course, many years before I
found out I was autistic. Looking back on it now, it makes sense why I loved it so much. I wasn’t alone in being ‘different’ any more. I would probably have been happy to stay there for the rest of my life. But in 1997, it changed hands and I took redundancy.
All of my jobs have been what many would judge as menial, low-skill, dead-end. Shop work, office work, farm work, driving, manual labour. Many in society as it is today would probably judge my current role, care work, in the same category – even though it’s one of the most responsible positions out there. Basically, they would sum me up – in spite of my degree and intelligence – as a low-achiever. These aren’t judgements I’d ever make myself about people doing such jobs. And frankly, I don’t care what other people think. I long ago learned not to be bothered about other people’s opinions of what I do with my own life.
For me, work has generally been a means to an end – enough to cover my bills and give me a bit of spare cash for other things. I’ve never been on a proper career path and have never been a manager or supervisor. I’ve never had the confidence for one thing. For another, of course, I’ve never stayed anywhere long enough to qualify for promotions. Finally – most of my jobs have fitted in, more or less, with the 9-to-5, Monday-to-Friday structure. It’s one I got used to at school: a routine that suited me, with evenings and weekends free for me to pursue my interests. I’ve been lucky enough to stay clear of jobs that have demanded long hours, night shifts or lots of overtime, and have never wanted those things. I’ve never wanted anything with demands or responsibilities that would impinge on my spare time – because that’s where I’ve always lived.
So… I work to live. I don’t live to work.
Having said that, doing something that I feel strongly about is important to me. That’s why the wholefood shop job meant so much. It wasn’t just a job, it was a whole way of life. It was everything about who I was then and am now.
And that’s why I now work in care, and with autistic people. I may not have their levels of need… but again, I’m on their wavelength. They’re vulnerable people. They’re my people. And because of my Asperger’s, I seem to be respected and to get the reasonable adjustments I need – another big issue for many autistic people in the workplace.
In many respects, I’m vulnerable myself. I know this. I don’t have savings, or a pension pot. If I lose this job – through ill-health, say – I’ll be fully reliant on the system of state welfare. I’ve been there once and know how stressful that is. It isn’t a kind system by any measure. Likewise, if I lose my flat – if my landlord sells up, say – I’ll have to take whatever social housing has to offer. Which isn’t much where I live. Or anywhere else now, come to that.
I try not to think about those things. I try to live, and get through my day, and keep the bills paid, and stay in good health.
It isn’t easy. But it could be worse.
People sometimes say to me ‘At least you’re lucky to be high-functioning, and be able to work and have a home.’
Lucky! If only they knew.
But relatively speaking, and in my own mind, I know I have a lot to be thankful for.
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Another very interesting read
Another very interesting read - thank you for posting it Harry. It always puzzles me why workers who care for vulnerable people, and babies and pre-school children too for that matter - are considered so menial and merit minimum wage. It's always seemed that it should be the other way around!
- Log in to post comments
Interesting again. I can well
Interesting again. I can well understand the feeling of needing to limit time working with others as it can be very stressful.
Also, that interests ouside work can be important, if work isn't too challenging, but your care work must be challenging, but writing in free time gives a good balance, and sense of achievement I expect.My father-in-law, as a young man had to go on to the 'shop floor' and operate a machine, as the wage for his clerical job was insufficient for looking after his family. So, he had many hobbies to use his active mind!
As my son has to earn his way in music, it has to be juggling lots of threads – teaching at different schools, teaching at home, etc. I'm sure he 'drops a ball' occasionally, I always hoped he'd be able to do something simple 9-5, where not too much organisation of time would be required, but he seems to be managing. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
satisfaction within with
satisfaction within with success in achieving what you are attempting, doesn't mean money or acknowledgement by others. Rhiannon
- Log in to post comments
How I used to feel, painting,
How I used to feel, painting, there's this stream, or current, and the stream is the same for anyone who wants to make things, whether no one sees it or lots of people, it's the making that matters
I sympathise so much with the needing time out. It's like you get more and more wound up, all the noise and lights and pointless stuff. Trying to shut out all the stuff that doesn't apply to you makes you tense. 18 hours a week was as much as I could manage before gibbering :0)
- Log in to post comments
It's great to see you writing
It's great to see you writing harry and you are a great writer. I reviewed your novel somewhere, possibly even here. I read a lot of posts on places like fakebook and aspiring authors always come away with the 'can I make a living from writing?' Which, of course, you can if you're harry potter and have a wand. As you know, by the time you publish your novel it is already out of date. Not that it matters. The gift is in creation.
- Log in to post comments
wasn't much enamoured with
wasn't much enamoured with The Little Stranger either.
- Log in to post comments