You Don’t Look Autistic — That’s the Problem.

What is one question you hate to be asked? Explain.

It’s not actually a question.
It’s the moment someone says to me:
“Oh! But you don’t look autistic.”

I know people usually mean it as a compliment. They think they’re saying I seem capable, social, or “normal.” But what it really reveals is a stereotype — the assumption that autism has a specific look.

Autism isn’t a costume. It isn’t a facial expression. It isn’t something you can spot from a quick glance across a room.

It’s a neurological difference that shapes how I experience the world — how I process sound, communication, social cues, routine, and emotion. And like many autistic people, I’ve learned to mask some of those differences so I can navigate environments that weren’t designed with people like me in mind.

Sometimes it feels like my diagnosis is being quietly erased.

So when someone says, “You don’t look autistic,” what they’re really saying is:
“You don’t match the picture of autism I had in my head.”

The truth is, autistic people look like everyone else.
The stereotype was the problem — not me.

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About Bob W Christian

I’m Bob Christian; a husband, father, grandfather and cat dad. I’m a dyslexic poet. I am on the Autism Spectrum and I started writing poetry, or scribbles as I’ve always referred to them, to help me to process my thoughts and emotions. It’s also helped with my PTSD. It’s gone from there and after over 20 years is still going strong, I’m now finally dabbling in to photography as I’ve been told I have a good eye.

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