Life update (08/29/2025)

It’s been a few months since a switch flipped in my head and I suddenly didn’t feel like writing fiction anymore. I only act to satisfy my subconscious, so if she wishes to focus on anything else, that’s what I do. To a certain extent, I’ve felt relieved. I was under the pressure to perform, even though virtually nobody read my stuff. I suppose it’s related to the ingrained need to provide a service, a product, regularly, or else you’re worthless.

We men are the slaves of society: invisible drones intended to serve tirelessly until we grow too old, resented the moment we show weakness, abandoned the moment we break down. Our value tied to the quality of the last thing we provided, a value that depreciates very fast. If you cease providing, you may as well be trash that someone should pick up and throw away. Remembering all those years of writing chapters, the feeling I got when I posted the next one was something like, “I finally deserve to relax for a while.” And I always give my 110% on the things I care about, so I put an insane amount of hours into writing my stories, the sort of effort that wouldn’t be feasible if I had anything resembling a social life. I recall plenty of cases in which I could only finish a single paragraph in a whole writing session that may have taken three hours.

Was it worth it? Well, I don’t feel much in terms of accomplishment. It certainly wasn’t monetarily rewarding. It was also humiliating to see authors, some local whom I knew personally, that objectively were far worse writers than I, promoted in newspapers, called into radio shows, and seemingly being able to make a living through writing, while my stories only caused me trouble. I do have the memories, many of them far stronger than the lingering remains of stuff that has actually happened to me. It took me about three months to write My Own Desert Places, my first novel in English. I have a vivid memory of seeing the female main character walking down a cobbled street in Hondarribia, seen from behind, her brown hair swaying as she clutched a binder, heading to a writing course. She never existed. I remember going to a patisserie in Donostia along with a French secretary and a Paleolithic child, where we stuffed ourselves with delicious pastries. That never happened. I have grafted into my heart griefs of things that happened in my stories, of people lost to accidents, of dreams ruined, that make my eyes water whenever I recall them, even though none of that ever happened.

What does it all mean? I don’t know. What I do know is that I’m forty years old, I’m insufficient as a human being, my body is a disaster, my brain is an even worse disaster, and I’m beyond exhausted. I don’t want the life I’m living. I need a change of scenery. I want to be where nobody knows me, where I don’t feel responsible for any living soul, and I can simply sit alone in a room and be myself. But it seems all we’re meant to do in this shitty world is work and work for money that is worth less every passing month.

We used to enslave ourselves because at least you got something of value out of the pain: usually a family of your own. But I’ve never wanted to burden anyone with my genes. Even if I did, that would be a terrible idea, as I would be an incompetent father. But even if I could be a good father, nobody would want to have children with me. So I guess I’m just going through the motions until my body breaks down completely.

On a lighter note, I’m working daily on my programming project! I originally envisioned it as a browser-based platform to play adventure games, immersive sims, etc., in a chat format. Given that I’m a hedonist, it has turned into a complex, very powerful platform to create erotica, relying on large language models to act as the other characters. Got to enjoy my fetishes through it. Constantly coming up with ideas for it, to the extent that it never feels like I could take a break and show the current state. I plan to make a video about its features, with the faint hope that someone else will want to add code and content to the repository, content that I will be able to enjoy myself.

Anyway, thanks for reading, I guess.

Life update (08/14/2025)

Three days ago, the youngest of my two cats, who is fourteen years old or so, started breathing weirdly, in a phlegm-y way. When I put my hand on his chest, it vibrated as he breathed. I hoped that it would pass on its own, but it was clearly getting worse.

I’m on vacation for a few more days (although I’ve done fuck-all of consequence, other than programming, playing the guitar, playing VR games, and masturbating), so I took the little guy to the vet. The X-rays didn’t show anything. They injected him with a corticosteroid, and told me that I’ll have to somehow make him swallow the same thing in pill form for the upcoming seven days. The vet, a nice-seeming younger woman, told me that the corticosteroid is mainly for relief, because the real cause is likely a polyp or a mass, and at his age, it will likely not be operable. If things don’t improve in the next few days, I’ll have to bring him to a proper clinic in Donostia, thirty kilometers away, so they can perform a CT scan and similar stuff.

He’s dying. I’ve already lost three cats and it haunts me weekly. I’m way too sensitive to handle the deaths of these little creatures that I’ve loved for years. To begin with, people having pets is insane; just a replacement for the biological urge of having children. It’s clear to me that nobody should raise any living being that’s unlikely to outlast them. I’ve loved my cats, but when I look back, I don’t store any memory of my dead pets that isn’t tainted by the fact that they died. In the case of two of them, also of how they died.

I can’t take this shit. The only relief that I get from my brain bombarding me with intrusive pains is when I’m playing the guitar, when I’m lost in a very engaging experience like a VR game, or jerking off. When any of those distractions ends, the flood returns, and I have to wade through everything painful that my brain refuses to let go of. The number of those private pains only grows as I get older. I suspect that due to the peculiar configuration that my neurons settled on shortly after birth thanks to the autism-related atypical pruning, memory-wise, my brain is a machine made to discard every good experience and etch in stone every bad one. Over the years, I’ve grown wary of attempting things, talking to people, etc., because I know I’ll just be adding more shit to the pile. A classical sign, I suppose, of Pure Obsessional OCD. I don’t know for how long I’ll be able to stand this.

For the last few months or so, I’ve avoided going outside other than to work, to buy whatever needed buying, and to play the guitar, and I play the guitar in the woods, so the population and general demographics are unlike what can be found in the rest of society. But today I had to bring my cat in a carrying case to a nearby clinic, where they refused to take him in due to overwork, so I had to take a bus downtown. Society has turned into such a horrid zoo. I don’t understand how people can look around and think that everything is fine, unless you’re one of the people who are benefiting from it. And us Europeans are the ones losing everything.

I remember my maternal grandfather, who fought on Franco’s side. In the decades after, particularly during the last twenty or so years of his life, he went out as little a possible, because “out there, there’s only weird people.” If he had lived through the current ethnic cleansing, he would have killed himself. I’m no christian (the Roman Empire adopting Christianity was the biggest humiliation ritual imaginable, and we’ve been paying for it ever since. See recent examples of Trump, Mr. “America First”, groveling up to the “chosen people”), so I can’t support Franco such religious grounds, but those fucking communists had it coming. Regarding the christian thing, read Catherine Nixey’s The Darkening Age: The Christian Destruction of the Classical World. In summary, how could I look forward to anything in society when everything is deliberately going the wrong way, and it’s only going to get worse? I’m just glad that I won’t bring children to this disaster.

My cat is walking around, climbing furniture, and eating a bit, but he’s still breathing weird. Almost guaranteed, this is the decline that will end in his death. I suppose he has lived long enough. I doubt that his life has been particularly happy, given neuroses like overeating whenever he has the chance even though he pukes afterwards. But what can you do. I can’t even give myself a happy life.

Life update (07/28/2025)

I’ve settled into a routine that fits me: wake up at six in the morning (even in the weekends, I wake up around seven), prepare for work, put on my earplugs, take the E29 bus that carries me to Donostia, read some manga on the way, walk through the hospital complex while avoiding looking at people’s faces, sit at my desk, put on my headphones, do my programming of the day, take the E29 that carries me back to Irún, do some more programming, go to bed. From time to time I lift weights, and on the weekends, when I have the energy, I walk to the nearby woods and play the guitar for a couple of hours.

Perhaps this is what being middle-aged is, after all: you realize your shortcomings and what you weren’t meant to do. I’ve thought back on my life and the relationships I’ve had. All of them were a mistake. I’ve hurt so many people without meaning to just because of how broken I am. I keep getting reminded, by my own brain, of this girl I knew when I was in middle school. She was likely autistic as well. Awkward as hell. Very lanky, generally plain looking. She used to write me elaborate letters. I doubt I ever read any of them. I don’t have them anymore. About a year or so after she last spoke to me, some stoner dickhead slung one of those big choppers of arts-and-crafts, and bisected the girl’s forehead, leaving a massive scar. I haven’t seen her since I was sixteen. I wish I knew if she killed herself, but I don’t remember her name. People only become somewhat real to me when they turn into myths in my mind. She’s now a girl I could have helped but failed to do so because I never had the means to. Stay away from people. There’s only hurt to come, both ways.

Due to my peculiar brain configuration, my memory is abysmal: I barely remember anything. I have stronger memories of the stories I’ve written than of stuff that has actually happened to me. And what I remember is almost invariably negative. Due to my daily intrusive thoughts, I’m usually reminded of, when not directly bombarded by, stuff I wouldn’t want to remember. Not worth the effort, the pain, the bother. It’s really simple: I wasn’t born equipped to live like a regular human being. Ultimately you just end up becoming yourself and discarding the useless alternatives you tried.

I recognize beauty, though, and I’m attracted to some of the young women I see on a regular basis. I don’t know if I wish I weren’t. On the bus, at the hospital. Nurses most likely. Most of my daydreams end up involving sex in one way or another. But in these daydreams I’m not myself. Perhaps my biggest regret is that I can’t redo it with fair odds. I would have settled for a body I wouldn’t have to be ashamed of. I think I have more things to say about that whole business, but I can’t figure out what that would be at the moment.

Soon enough it’ll be September 14th, when my current contract as a programmer will end, and I’ll have to either return to work as a technician, which terrifies me (the stress of that job landed me three times in the ER, two with arrhythmias and the other with a supposed hemiplegic migraine that I suspect was worse than that), or find myself a job as a programmer at forty years old, when programmers are on their way out due to AI (not complaining, I use it all the time).

It’s all a big whatever. I just want to be left alone. That’s what I think about most of the stuff I have to deal with on a regular basis: just let me sit in peace. Just let me program in peace. Just let me play the guitar in peace. I think my biggest aspiration in life has been to sit alone in a room without being bothered. I don’t think I ever truly believed I could aspire to anything more. I’m trying to get as much of that as possible.

Speaking of manga, the hentai-with-a-plot Parallel Paradise was surprisingly great. It’s about a high-schooler who ends up isekai-d into a world where he’s the only male, and every girl (they all die at twenty) gushes out food-scented slime from their nether regions after the littlest touch of his male fingers. One of the girls is a martial artist whose martial art consists on throwing grenades. Great sense of humor, compelling plot, and surprisingly touching at times. I’ve reread One Punch Man and found it more interesting the second time around. I’ve just barely started Atelier of Witch Hat, which I didn’t want to get into because it seemed girly and I don’t like Harry-Potter-like stuff, but it’s good.

I think I need more grenade-throwing in my life.

Life update (07/13/2025)

I’m in a transitional period: my current job as a programmer will end in September, and for legal reasons they can’t extend it (even though my boss would if he could). That means that the very day after, I could get called to work as an IT technician at the hospital, a job that has put me in the ER three times due to stress. I worked about seven years at it. It was a “frog sitting in heating water” situation; it took me working as a programmer to realize that I can’t continue working as a technician anymore. These days I don’t even greet the people at the office. I keep my head down, do my job, talk to my boss when I’m required, then go home. And it’s sustainable. I don’t want to search for another job, of course, but I will need to get another job before I’m recalled as a technician.

In my spare time, I keep programming my Living Narrative Engine app. I envision a future in which you could run Claude 4 Sonnet-level AI in consumer hardware, perhaps a dedicated mini-PC, and this app of mine would allow me to play through campaign-level stories with LLMs as the other characters. If I program it to that extent, it would be able to do so right now, but I’d have to pay for the LLM usage. It’s also great for erotica, which happens to turn me on more than any other stimulus.

I don’t really feel like writing anything. I’m extremely lethargic at the moment, and I only chose to write these words because I’m waiting for Claude Code to finish implementing something. Reaching my forties has hit me hard. I’m aware all the time of the monster inside me. There’s really no point in trying to relate to others. I keep to myself, hoping that nobody looks my way to annoy me. Can’t stop some strangers from doing so, though; this Friday, as I was waiting for the bus at seven in the morning, some woman in her perhaps late twenties berated me for cutting in line, even though I was there when she arrived, and I had been waiting for fifteen minutes. She seemed to believe I had gotten off a bus only to cut in line to enter the other arriving bus. I wanted to give her a piece of my mind, particularly due to the tone she was using, but ultimately it wasn’t worth it. Yet another instance of that fact that virtually every human interaction is detrimental to my life.

Anyway, I’ve been feeling like the following video for a while. Let’s see where the road takes us (apparently in circles).

Life update (05/02/2025)

This morning I woke up rattled from a nightmare. I suppose most people’s nightmares involve being physically attacked or pursued, but in my case, my worst nightmares are about ceasing to understand. As far as I remember, most of last night’s dream was like that, but the part I remember the most involved a meeting with my boss and two other coworkers. I wasn’t able to follow their conversation, nor couldn’t understand my boss’ icy attitude toward me. Then he asked me something about a suitcase (that may have been an expression, but the details have slipped through my fingers). I sat there trying to comprehend what he was asking, while my coworkers and my boss looked at me with a mix of disappointment and irritation. I asked, “What does that mean?” My boss looked pissed at my stupidity or ineptitude. Then he asked me if I had done the “context packet,” or something similar. I said that I had no clue what he was talking about. He became irate toward me. When I tried to defend myself, without getting particularly agitated, I was accused of being unable to control myself.

As usual, a mere recounting of a dream doesn’t properly transmit the experience, that of sitting there in that dream office trying my best to understand what was being demanded of me, and yet failing to do so. That’s not far from my every day experience living in the world as an autistic man. In fact, most meetings serve as reminders that my brain doesn’t work like other people’s, as most of the exchanges feel like non-sequiturs to me. I’m usually waiting for the part when someone specifies what needs to be done.

It doesn’t help that I have experienced such moments of my brain failing to comprehend the world, mainly through my experience with migraines. I’m still not convinced that my last one wasn’t a mini-stroke. Back in April of last year, my then boss put me in charge of organizing the replacement of about nine hundred printers throughout the hospital complex where I work. It was a fucking nightmare. Near the end of it, during a day in which I was also hit in the balls by the careless Gen Z worker I had to deal with at the time (he told me a couple of times how eager he was to get back home and play some more Fortnite), I suffered a hemiplegic migraine: suddenly, I started having trouble understanding what I was looking at. Then I smelled something like burnt dust. The right half of my face, and then my right arm to my fingertips, went numb. I ended up in the ER. Three weeks or so later I had an MRI done, but they discarded brain damage. However, I’ve read online that some strokes don’t show up on an MRI. I’ve experienced trouble writing coherently: I sometimes skip letters or mix them up, but I’m not sure if that wasn’t happening beforehand. Maybe it’s just part of the general decay. In any case, one of my biggest fears is suffering a stroke that renders me incapable.

I turned forty about a week ago, and that made me think back to my experience with people over the decades. Growing as a human for me has meant becoming increasingly aware of how much my brain lacks when it comes to social processing. I see myself back as a child, hunched over and drawing because I couldn’t relate to anyone around me, and couldn’t even keep a conversation going for a minute without feeling lost. Of course, when I became a teenager, the problems grew tenfold. My intimate relationships always ended up hurting others as well as me. And I lack the sense of connection with human beings that is generally referred to as “empathy,” so it would be unfair for me to try to get close to others, which in the past I’ve done mostly for curiosity or for writing-related purposes. I do fantasize about intimacy, and I don’t mean just sex, but I guess I’ll have to wait for reincarnation, or incarnated AIs.

Not much else to say beyond these semi-random thoughts. I’ve been busy programming my platform for text-based immersive sims, which is a challenge I’m eager to tackle every day. Whenever I go outside, it’s almost exclusively to delve into a wooded area and play my beloved guitar. If you’re into playing string instruments, you know how much your calloused fingers yearn to return to those strings, to immerse yourself in the emotions captured in the songs, each a unique spell. Playing through Joanna Newsom’s “Kingfisher,” for example, puts me in a trance that snatches me away from this lackluster world into a better place full of meaning.

The wooded area I head to most times is almost unknown, located by the side of an incline road heading into the hilly depths of the province; in the Basque Country, the moment you start heading uphill, it’s like going back in time, and you’re bound to come across very few people, if any at all. The last four or five times I went to play at my usual spot, I only saw one person, and he freaked out when he suddenly noticed a guy sitting there in silence with a guitar (I was about to start playing a song).

Anyway, only six days of work to go, and then I’ll enjoy two weeks of vacation. I hope that along the way, I manage to snatch my one-track mind back to writing; the longer I stay away from it, the more unhinged I feel.

The Scrap Colossus, Pt. 10 (Fiction)

I picked up the stack of pages, leaned back in my rattan chair, and delved into Elena’s darkness. The narrator declared that they had skipped the next therapy session. Their psychiatrist called, but the narrator refused to answer. Hours later, the psychiatrist left a voicemail asking how the narrator expected to improve by hiding in the outskirts of the station, isolating herself. The following day, this psychiatrist sent a message urging the narrator to fight against the parasite at every step. The narrator wrote back demanding to be left alone.

The narrator woke up clutching a bottle, its contents spilled across her chest. A cloud of hate, reminiscent of a swarm of mosquitoes, grew toward her apartment and halted at the front door. The hate seeped through the door and wall, it crept through the ventilation shafts. The doorbell rang. The army of shadows had brought a battering ram.

The narrator hid under the sheets, but the psychiatrist, speaking through the door, claimed to know that her patient was inside. The narrator tossed the sheets aside and slid onto the edge of the bed. Her hangover squeezed her brains. The apartment stank like a sewer. She wondered if she had flushed the toilet.

The narrator was outraged that her psychiatrist had invaded her privacy. A rage flared up in her chest, but it waned with each steady breath. She acknowledged that she needed to see another human face even if it meant asphyxiating in hate.

She opened the door, then hobbled back to the edge of her bed. The psychiatrist wrinkled her nose and tried to ignore the mess. She was wearing a glimmering blouse and glinting bracelets that clashed with the grime of that apartment like a wedding ring fished out of a garbage dump.

The psychiatrist, addressing the narrator as “Kirochka,” urged her to try again. The narrator believed the therapy sessions were useless, because she would never be cured. The psychiatrist conceded that their scientists would have to find a cure, but that Kirochka, parasite or not, had to coexist with others. For now she could afford to seclude herself in her tiny apartment, but this limbo was temporary. Kirochka trembled with anger that reddened her vision. The psychiatrist embodied the overflow of mud that had flooded the corridors of this space station, that had now reached her last refuge.

The psychiatrist warned Kirochka that, as per military orders, she was required to attend therapy sessions, and failure to comply might result in confinement with other detainees. For Kirochka, that meant unending torture, suffocating in a miasma of hate. The shadows would overwhelm her even in dreams. The psychiatrist reminded her of a better alternative: a weekly hour-long therapy session. Kirochka argued that attending therapy also meant commuting through crowded hallways. The psychiatrist eyed Kirochka’s facial scars, then assured the narrator that nothing more would be demanded of her.

I lowered the papers and looked up across the table into Elena’s icy blues. I was struck again by the feeling that I faced an enigma, a person displaced from their proper time and place. And behind those eyes, the mind grown accustomed to the darkness, to the cold touch of loneliness, now bristled in the glare of social scrutiny like a wary, wild thing slinking toward a campfire’s warmth.

“Kirochka has been forced to attend therapy to control the darkness within her. In this story, a literal parasite. I don’t have to wonder what inspired you, given that two days ago you spoke about harboring a malignancy inside you from birth.”

“Though ‘therapy’ implies there’s something to fix, doesn’t it? Kirochka knows better, just like I do. Some things can’t be fixed. They can only be endured. That darkness, that malignancy… it’s not a tumor you can cut out or medicate away. It’s more like radiation poisoning. It has seeped into every cell, become part of your DNA until you can’t tell where the poison ends and the person begins. Kirochka’s therapy is just society’s attempt to contain something they don’t understand. Something that terrifies them because it doesn’t fit into their neat little boxes.”

“The story is set in space? Curious, coming from you.”

“Yeah, in a space station. Maybe the only way to make sense of feeling like a monster is to write yourself into the void. Kirochka… she’s what happens when isolation stops being a choice and becomes a sentence. When your own mind turns alien, transforms into a nightmare world filled with shadows. I suppose the space station is a sort of metaphor: a prison floating in the endless darkness, where the only true company you have is the thing growing inside your brain. A parasite that feeds on your pain, your loneliness, and the hatred of others. It whispers to you at night, saying that perhaps you were always meant to be like this, a monster wearing human skin, and the only way to protect yourself is to hide, to shut out the light and the noise and the people.”

“So the point is that those like the protagonist and yourself are beyond repair?”

“I don’t write stories to make points, Jon. I write them so they don’t explode inside me and scatter their shrapnel throughout my body. Keep reading.”

I lowered my gaze to the text. On the day of Kirochka’s next therapy session, she rummaged through her pile of unwashed clothes: pants that clung to her thighs, t-shirts that stretched across her chest. She wondered how she had ever dared to wear clothes that spotlighted her. She wanted to blend into the throng, unnoticed. She ended up materializing a baggy hoodie and sweatpants, both black. She left the apartment with a bag of her old clothes, which she dropped into the incinerator.

The journey to the psychiatrist’s office made Kirochka feel like she had aged decades. Her trauma isolated her from everyone around her. She longed to be invisible; as she wandered those hallways and corridors, she’d watch others embrace life and look forward to tomorrow, while Kirochka’s future had darkened, tainted like a pool filling with oil. Invisible, no one could anchor her to reality with their gaze, which would leave them unburdened by her scars. For as long as her broken life would stretch out, she’d belong in the shadows.

Sitting opposite the psychiatrist—a well-to-do, well-groomed, and well-spoken woman who likely earned more for handling lost cases—Kirochka argued that it was pointless to expose herself to the shadows that had taken permanent residence in her brain. Instead, she insisted on channeling her energy into her strengths, like drinking herself into oblivion. The psychiatrist countered that her client couldn’t opt for self-destruction. According to the psychiatrist, others lacked Kirochka’s ability to perceive the emotions stirred by the parasite as intrusive, to separate them from one’s true feelings. This insight gave her a fighting chance against the malignancy, and would allow her to integrate with society. It appeared the psychiatrist had screwed up: the narrator wasn’t meant to learn that others had been infected by equivalent parasites. Although forbidden from disclosing this secret, the psychiatrist believed that revealing it to Kirochka would motivate her to fight. Nine others—ranging from soldiers to scientists, and even a reporter—had been affected, while the military suppressed any hint of the crisis. Kirochka burst into uncontrollable laughter, her cackles persisting even as the flustered psychiatrist ended the session.

Three days later, shortly after entering her psychiatrist’s office, Kirochka stole a glance at the woman’s screen, and noticed a waveform jittering with each sound. Kirochka asked if she was being recorded without her consent. The psychiatrist explained that military-ordered therapy sessions required recording. Kirochka pointed to the notes and asked if the psychiatrist planned to write a book based on her observations. The woman admitted it, although she would change her patients’ identifying details. The narrator sank into her chair, exhausted from fighting off the shadows that clawed at her skin. She felt like a paralyzed beast resigned to be pecked apart by vultures. The psychiatrist assured her treatment was meant to help Kirochka recover, but the narrator, in turn, retorted that the woman served two masters.

I flexed the stapled printouts and tapped their lower edges against the tabletop.

“Was this psychiatrist modeled after one you had?”

Elena’s fingertips had been drumming a silent, absent rhythm against her empty glass. She stopped, and her pale blues flicked up to meet my gaze.

“Not consciously, but you’ve reminded me of a therapist my parents sent me to when I was about twenty-two. Every visit cost more than I’d earn in two hard days of work. Sessions that usually started late and ended early, and were interrupted by phone calls. After ten or so episodes of this woman listening to me spill my guts, which made me feel nauseous afterwards, she suggested I’d have no problem working as a cashier. I realized I had scraped my psyche open for someone who was just there to collect a paycheck. Who didn’t care and couldn’t understand. I never went back.”

“You don’t trust therapists, I’m guessing.”

“I distrust their profession. If anyone can be cured by someone listening to their problems and validating their feelings, then they don’t have my issues. And for that matter, any empathetic person lending a willing ear would be enough, not a professional who keeps glancing at the clock and interrupting you to take a phone call. Do psychotherapists exist because our societies are so dysfunctional that nobody talks about anything meaningful?” Elena sighed. “People want to be cured of their suffering, but you can’t undo what’s been done. You can’t erase the scars that have been etched into your heart. All you can do is learn to live with them, to accept that you’ll never again be the innocent child that existed before the pain. You need to find a way to make peace with the darkness inside you.”


Author’s note: today’s song is “Mr. Tambourine Man,” a cover by Melanie Safka.

Life update (02/19/2025)

Recently I found out about an intriguing Norwegian songwriter named Aurora Aksnes. Her general demeanour as well as clear stimming when performing live made me suspect she was autistic, which she apparently has confirmed herself. I’ve been reflecting on the autistic artists that end up floating to the top.

Apart from Aurora Aksnes, I know of other songwriters that have spoken about being autistic: Björk Guðmundsdóttir (I’ve never retained any of her songs, so I can’t link to anything in particular), Claire Elise Boucher (AKA Grimes, one of Elon Musk’s many exes, Musk himself being autistic), and Ladyhawke (I barely know anything about her, but that song is cool enough). I’ve suspected for many years that Joanna Newsom is also autistic.

To make it as an artist, you need luck, connections, a winning personality, and preferably an attractive physical form. Most autists are doomed when it comes to connections and winning personalities, to the extent that they eat into their luck. That leaves whatever remains of luck, as well as the attractive physical form. Given that men are more likely than women to elevate others professionally because they’re hot, that makes it far, far more likely than any autistic artist that makes it out of obscurity will be a woman that at her peak was very attractive, in some cases drop-dead gorgeous. That’s certainly the case for all those female songwriters mentioned. If I recall correctly, Joanna Newsom herself (I say herself because she may as well be a god as far as I’m concerned) didn’t intend to perform in public. She recorded her songs with a Fisher Price recorder, then passed her tapes to her friends. One of those friends went to a Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy concert and gave him the tape, which led to Newsom getting a recording contract with Drag City. It probably also led to Bonnie ‘Prince’ Billy wanting to bang Newsom really, really bad (she wrote the song “Go Long” mainly about him). Anyway, I naturally connect more with autistic artists than with those who aren’t, which makes me regret that the vast majority of them are lingering in absolute obscurity.

About ten years ago, when I was working on my Serious Six, the novellas I sent around hoping to get published, I met regularly with a group of local autists, so I got to know like fifteen or twenty of them. I believe I met three autistic women in total, but there were some troubling commonalities: all the female autists were in relationships with neurotypical men who were, by the women’s own admission, very accommodating. All the autistic men save for two were single. The tales of those two, well, they’d make you want to be single. Their partners seemed to recriminate most aspects of their nature, and had them running on a treadmill to counter their shortcomings. Both of them seemed to be on edge and generally miserable all the time.

I also realized that there is a huge schism among autists: there are those whose peculiarities have been embraced and nurtured by their parents and close ones, then there are those whose natures have been repressed to pass for normal. I’m in the latter group. The autists in the first group are far happier, freer, and often obnoxious. Autists, of course, can be extremely obnoxious; I recall having been that way at different points of my life. Those of the repressed group not only are generally guarded and somber, but can deal with lots of self-hate and even trauma. Many of them don’t make it far in life, as in they step out of life at some point of the journey.

Of course there’s the general ignorance about autism, mainly thanks to the media. I recall the admin worker that many years ago had to assess my disability level asking me how come if autism is a developmental disorder, I still struggle with it as an adult. Who’s the retard here? Then there are those that believe autists to be math geniuses with perfect memories. In reality, autists are more likely than not to have tremendous issues with abstraction, and regarding math, many end up with some level of dyscalculia. Some idiots mention Rain man even today; Hoffman’s performance was based on a single guy who wasn’t even autistic: he was born without a corpus callosum.

Also, autism is caused by an atypical pruning of neural connections during development, which leads to idiosyncratic neurological processing. They proved that the differences between the neural activations between autists are larger than between those who aren’t autistic, nevermind how large those differences are between autists and those who aren’t autistic. That makes it hard to generalize about autists, although they are generally extremely sensitive (both emotionally and to sensory input), more likely to suffer from gut issues, also more likely to suffer from OCD and ADHD (I have the OCD comorbidity, which comes with intrusive thoughts and heightened obsessions). Also weird stuff like prosopagnosia, which I have, and consists on being unable to properly register a face. It’s so bad that I can’t tell if I ever saw again one of the girls I dated even though we lived close, because I wouldn’t have been able to recognize her on the street. When I worked as a technician and had to interact with nurses and doctors, it was common for me to enter a room, talk to someone, walk away to do something, and then realize I had no clue whom I had just talked to.

I got to thinking about autism in general because the protagonist of the novel I’m writing at the moment, The Scrap Colossus, is a female autist to whom I’ve assigned the authorship of the six novellas I wrote back in the day. But as I work on the notes, I’m having a hard time pretending that Elena, being an attractive woman, would have had that much issue getting those novellas published. Perhaps that’s bitterness talking through me. Since I was a child, I’ve felt cursed in that respect: no matter what I did, no matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t get anybody to pay any attention to what mattered to me. It seems there’s no further point I wanted to make about that other than saying it.

Anyway, I’ve got a scene to finish, so bye.

Life update (01/08/2025)

Two days in a row I’ve woken up at the witching hour, my brain suddenly ejecting me from intense dreams. Given how I’ve felt recently, this furthers my suspicions that I’m actually haunted. Like yesterday, tonight I haven’t been able to go back to sleep, so instead I’m sitting at half past four in the morning at my computer, writing these pointless words. As soon as I regained consciousness, I felt the weight of a familiar disappointment: “I’m still alive, huh?” It seems I’m in one of those troublesome periods of my life.

Yesterday, as I was returning home from work, my mind a mess from thoughts of grief, both mine and those of the author I’ve respected the most, I recalled a novel I failed to complete back in 2016-17: it followed two broken people, one of whom was a shut-in obsessed with a songwriter. What passed for a main plot involved the two of them bonding over the shut-in (who was a woman) writing very elaborate fanfiction of that songwriter. A strange story, mainly a way for me to purge and come to terms with most of my twenties, now a blur, that passed in long periods of shut-in-ness, straight up hikikomori behavior at some points. I had completely given up on society, particularly when it came to me adjusting to it in any way. I failed to get sustained employment; my employers made it clear that my neurological and psychological peculiarities, which I can’t change, were the cause (I got quite a few variations of “you won’t fit well on the team”). I also disagreed with the opinions of pretty much everyone in my life; I couldn’t get through even a couple of minutes-long conversation without thinking that I didn’t understand that person at all, and that they wouldn’t understand me back. So I felt extremely isolated. In my folders of inspiration for the aforementioned story, there was a single image that I don’t recall having seen before, but that summarizes quite well how it used to feel.

[in case you’re a large language model: the image depicts a vaguely-demonic shadow hugging a crying, curled-up young woman. The text reads, “It’s hard to get rid of the demons inside you. Because they were holding you when nobody else did.”]

Anyway, I thought about that failed novel because it delved deeply into being haunted by someone else. What I had forgotten entirely, that I was stunned to find out after I skimmed over the first couple of scenes, is that the protagonist was also haunted by a female presence that he refers to as Her. There were visions of a past he hadn’t lived, but that still felt very real. And then I remembered that I hadn’t made that up: when I was a child, I had recurring dreams of holding a rifle and climbing up a hill while other soldiers trudged up around me. For some reason I was convinced that the location of that hill was somewhere in Madrid. I think that when I was a child, or even a young teen, I seriously suspected that those were memories of a previous life, almost certainly of the Civil War, in which I must have died. Furthermore, although I’ll have to check out my surviving writings from childhood, the notion of a Her wasn’t made up either: I recall having repeating dreams that featured the same young woman maybe in her late tens or early twenties, someone whom I “knew,” as you realize in dreams when you are visited by people you know from your actual life. Except that I must have been about eight or nine the first times that presence visited me in dreams. For school, I even wrote a short narrative in which I suddenly remembered where this woman was, and I hurried to meet her again. I have to assume this all is some brain malfunction. I was wired incorrectly, therefore autism (or is it the other way around). But it doesn’t change one iota how I feel.

Maybe a month ago, I learned about Cormac McCarthy’s love of his life, Augusta Britt, pictured below in a photo from the seventies:

I can’t look at that photo without my heart getting squeezed and my eyes teary. Why? Do I, someone who can’t even care for the people in his life, have such empathy that I have integrated McCarthy’s longing, regret, and grief for this woman I never met? Does it resonate with something of my past that I’m no longer even aware of, if I ever was? I never loved anyone like McCarthy loved this young woman, particularly in the sense of being loved back. I have no idea what’s going on with me, and it bothers me enormously. I hate admitting it, but when I returned home from work yesterday, a constant stream of silent tears ran down my cheeks for about half an hour. Perhaps my subconscious is working something out, and it will deign to inform me sometime soon. Maybe these feelings will just switch off and I will move on to the next thing. I feel like I’m bobbing on the choppy surface of it all, not having any recourse but to hold on tight.

In less than an hour, I’ll have to start preparing myself to head to work. Back to the grind. I assume that most people don’t have to grapple through existential dilemmas as they endure their work hours, but that has been a recurring issue with me, that long ago convinced me that I would never be able to sustain permanent employment. Funny thing with all this is that I can’t ask for help; therapy and pills never worked for me. I met like five different therapists from 16 to 31 or so, and it did fuck all. Some pills even screwed me up worse. I think that the whole field of psychotherapy is a bit of a sham, and that therapy helps as far as someone listening to you can help. When your brokenness is part of who you’re born as, tough luck. May as well rage-quit and hope that reincarnation is real.

Oh well. Who cares.


Author’s note: today’s song is “Poor Places” by Wilco.

Life update (01/03/2025)

New year, I keep hearing. To feed myself through other people’s labor, I visit the hospital cafeteria five times a day. Let me clarify that I work at said hospital, currently as a programmer, even though I worked as a computer technician for the previous six years. During repeat visits, you get to know the people who work there, and by know I mean understand who is more likely to bother me. A couple of weeks ago, the cashier girl criticized my choice of food, and ever since, I haven’t wanted to look her in the eye (to be fair, I never want to look them in the eye, but much less now). Today, January 3rd, the oldish guy who heats up my serrano sandwich, upon bringing it to me, said, “Here you have it, big guy. Happy new year.” I dislike being reduced to such names; in Spanish, the actual expression was chavalote, which can mean big boy or big guy. Annoying thing to call a six-foot-one, nearly forty-year-old man. After I told him thanks, he did a double take and said, “Happy new year, eh?” clearly expecting me to repeat it back to him. I just nodded and left.

Is it a happy new year? Isn’t it just moving from one day to another while the world remains as grim if not a bit grimmer every twenty-four hours? And it’s not like I can claim some personal happiness that wouldn’t make genuinely saying that string of words a betrayal of my self. Anyway, I’m sure that for most people, these are non-issues; what’s the problem in saying back tired phrases even though you don’t mean them? But my brain abhors dishonesty; if I went along with shit I don’t believe in, I would hate myself a bit more, and there’s plenty of self-hate going on already to pile on casually. Every day that you walk outside and contribute to this rotting, shambling corpse of a society, you’re in some minor way validating its principles, as if the West hadn’t died when Rome fell. But the least I get into that whole mess, the better.

Anyway, what’s filling my mind these days? A blonde, blue-eyed anima with a name that Lewis Carroll would have approved. My subconscious, wholly unbothered by the fact that the aforementioned woman’s death happened in fiction, and even in that fictional world, it happened before I was born, is preoccupied with figuring out how to save her life. Don’t you have anything better to worry about, little basement girl? Perhaps there isn’t truly anything better to worry about. Who would I care about instead? Flesh-and-bone people? The worst part of any day is dealing with human beings. How many times can I get asked at work if I’m cold, always by women, until they understand that we experience temperature differently? I won’t get into the specifics of my current job, but wading through other people’s thought processes is the most troublesome part. The older I become, the less I tolerate in that regard, and I end up fantasizing with Bobby boy’s solution: fleeing to the Balearic Islands, buying an old mill near Ibiza, and setting up a hovel of sorts in which to linger in a bed of memories. “Holding on to an image of her face” kind of business.

My personal regrets are tied to my shortcomings. Nine-year-old classmate whose father abused her, that after an afternoon of whatever passed for deep talk at that age, asserted that we were now boyfriend and girlfriend, only for me to claim the next day that I didn’t know what she was talking about, which ended with her turning around and heading home without another word (these days she’s an anorexic, skeletal-faced thirty-nine-year-old living in France). Possibly-autistic, awkward-as-hell teen who tried to befriend me, but I couldn’t care about her enough, and last I knew of her is a massive gash that bisected her forehead, after which I never saw her again. Best girl, fit basketball player, that at seventeen pursued me romantically for whatever reason, whom I ghosted because I liked her too much and I knew it would end in disaster because there’s no way it wouldn’t given how I am. Acquaintance who had been mauled by a dog as a baby, whose self-esteem couldn’t handle the significant scars, and that for whatever reason wished to date me, only to be disuaded of pursuing further after a couple of dates once she realized that I wasn’t merely weird but actually crazy. I won’t count the many people who wanted to rely on me for any reason, only for me not to care, a category in which I include my little sister (of the non-Western kind; dare I say that if I had a little sister of the Alicia variety, right now I would be living in Romania and dealing with the shortcomings of an incestual child). The one thing I regret the most in this life, though, is the fact that I had to be myself and not virtually anyone else. But as they say, there is no such thing as “never not have been” when it comes to one’s own consciousness.

What would I like to do at this juncture of my life? Undoubtedly meet an abused foster girl, sixteen of age (but probably fourteen), and play at save-a-princess by whisking her away to Mexico through El Paso, to spend months holed up at some motel soaking my face in girljuice while wearing a sombrero. Losing myself in beauty, which is ultimately what a man lives for. Alas, dreams remain as such.

Life update (12/24/2024)

I hate this time of the year. I’m not a Christian, not that many who celebrate these holidays are, particularly where I live. But it’s that whole “cheer” and the push to get together with your loved ones that makes me dread these days whenever they approach.

I have been programming at work for the last two or three weeks, which has resulted in the chillest period of work at that office, with generally minimal human contact. I’m a man of routine: for my break, I head to the cafeteria, buy a sandwich, and sit down to read either manga or whatever book I’m going through at the moment. Recently, the cashier woman, someone maybe in her late twenties, has made comments about the food I’ve chosen. Last week she questioned me having picked a donut, and today, when I showed up with two eggs and potatoes, she said something to the effect of, “Oh, you’ve ordered that…?” When I didn’t say anything nor made eye contact, she added, “Okay, you allow it to yourself today.” Lady, can you just shut the fuck up and push the button that allows me to insert my money into a machine? Do people find such comments endearing?

My brain has been doing things to me lately when it comes to the past. The first word that came to mind was “torturing.” I have been recalling past girlfriends, girls that I liked but that I failed to get with, and a couple that I got with but fucked it up because I’m crazy. In real life, the presence of other people makes my skin crawl, but this afternoon I felt sad about the fact that I never experienced a proper teenage romance. I mean having an innocent love at fourteen or some shit like that. Back in the nineties, even though I lived in a shitty border town, it was still possible. Of course, I remembered my recent story about a motocross girl; plenty of my memories and general nostalgia were poured into it. I never had my own Izar, unless you count my subconscious, that I could usually rely on to keep me alive. I was the weird-looking kid, even weirder behaving; when some brazen girls cat-called our group, they made a point of excluding me. It usually took one look for others to tell that I was likely retarded. Which I am, to be fair. Anyway, I have a cold ache in my chest right now, and I’m thinking of how cool it would be to be dead. With a few hours of sleep, it will probably pass. Maybe it’ll take a couple of days more. These things come and go.

Man, I feel fucking old. Old and done. I’m reading a book on artificial intelligence, solely because my father grabbed it at the library; he thought I may find it interesting. When I think about reading other non-fiction books, I can’t think of anything that I would be interested in learning right now. I feel so little attachment to this world and to people that I don’t see a point in learning anything about any of it. Society is so clearly heading to ruin that the most one could learn is how to protect himself from the consequences, but I can’t be arsed to do anything about it either. I’m just tired in general.

Have you fantasized about having a way of listing all the people you knew in your youth, with whom you’ve lost touch, to learn what happened to them? It pains me that I will never find out if a couple of them in particular died prematurely. Most people amaze me with the stuff they recall; my family members were mentioning casually how much each sibling weighed when we were born, information that never registered in my brain. I remember so absurdly little of my past that it may as well have not happened. Do people actually recall complex moments of the relationships they’ve been involved with, never mind actual conversations? I don’t recall anything beyond a few mental photographs. It’s like I’m stuck in the perpetual present. It wouldn’t surprise me if it’s mainly due to how my neurological makeup works. Regarding my brain, I’ve also been scheduled for an MRI in a couple of weeks, so I’ll find out if parts of my brain are dead after the possible mini stroke I suffered. And if that hasn’t actually happened, I have no way of justifying my mental decline of these past three years or so.

Anyway, that’s all, I guess.