Description

This blog is produced by Brynne Jewell to share her own experiences with Tourette Syndrome and to also provide a place for others with questions or comments to mingle.

June 05, 2015

Pressures of Being An Adult


    As a child I couldn't really identify with this statement. It wasn't that I couldn't see the people who didn't accept me for who I am, I simply wouldn't. Now as an adult, it seems that I notice people's disapproval more and more, not to mention, the pressure I put on myself to be an upstanding, accomplished adult. I hide some of my tics around family members fearful of disapproval or misunderstanding. As I've mentioned in the past my immediate family has always been very supportive, but sometimes even around them I get self conscious, because "watching your back" is a hard thing to turn off. I hide many more in public these days. Part of this, I think, results in a change in the way I feel about myself. As humans change is only natural. I feel as if I've entered a new stage in my life and the pressure to do certain things and be a certain way have only increased.
    I recently started a new job and did not convey to my boss that I have Tourette Syndrome. Usually I do, but this time I want things to be different. A few days after I began working there we had a night where things were rather quiet and as you may or may not know, when it's quiet those of us with TS always feel the need to fill that silence with our vocal tics. The urge was so overwhelming that I wanted to curl up in a ball and hide. The next day I broke down in tears telling my mum and sister what had happened and how I felt about it. Every day, I'm worried that my tic cycle will get worse or my individual tics will be so terribly obvious that someone will take notice.
    This concerns me because I believe they will not want to give a promotion to someone who seems, in their eyes, to have a disability, that they will see it as a weakness. Also, I have experienced discrimination and humiliation in past jobs due to my tics.
    As always I'm experiencing new and different tics all the time. Just when I've adjusted to one, another one joins the club. I worry that when I tell people that my urge to throw my pen, phone, or other object onto the floor is just a tic, they won't believe me. They'll think I'm just making trouble. After all, I'm an adult and adults don't do things like that or make sounds that sound like the beginnings of temper tantrum which in reality is merely stress coming out in the form of a vocal tic.

1 comment:

  1. That's a tough one. There's no real way to know until you know the person you're potentially opening up to. I disclosed at one job, and never had any problems with it. It helped, though, that my boss was blind and was extremely aware of the legal protections we all shared under the ADA.

    The next job I finally shared with my office mate after she came back to work from a stay in the hospital. She was bipolar. I had TS and OCD. I don't think either of us told anyone outside that office, but to each other we were safe.

    My next job it took years before I told anyone. As your quote from Jodi Picoult said, most took it well and moved on. It was like my saying I was left-handed. Big deal. But one person didn't, and yeah, their reaction overwhelmed everything else. Eventually they left, and now things are great.

    But you never can tell. Not until you get to know the people.

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