My Current Stims

TW: non-graphic descriptions of hair pulling, Trichotillomania, and self injury/self harm and photographs of being tattooed.

When I was diagnosed as autistic, I did a lot of research and reading to try and make sense of my life through this new lens and one of the things that I struggled with was stimming. Short for ‘self-stimulating behaviour,’ stimming is behaviour – commonly repetitive movements and sounds – that we all use to self-regulate and self-soothe. Everybody does it to a certain degree but many neurodivergent individuals struggle with self regulating and so we stim more – and more noticeably – to compensate. It helps us to manage our emotions, anxiety and uncertainty and stress, sensory information, and helps us to express joy. I found it difficult to identify these behaviours in myself but over time, and especially over the last couple of years in therapy,* I’ve come to realise that there are many things that I do that play a big part in my attempts to stay somewhat regulated but because many of them have often served another purpose, I haven’t recognised what else they’ve been doing for me. Some of them are great and fun, some of them are harmful and I need help with, and some function only as a way to process what I’m feeling or what’s going on in my body but all of them help me to regulate myself and get through the day.

*I quit talk therapy in 2024 and dug into different modalities, eventually landing on Somatic Massage Therapy for trauma release and truly, I cannot articulate how much it has helped me. The years in talk therapy weren’t wasted (mostly) but this is a totally different level of processing and healing and growing. I was so checked out from my body and how it was processing emotion – as a survival mechanism – and the process of reconnecting to it has really unleashed some of my stimming, particularly swaying, swinging my arms, and flapping, in a really freeing way.


Singing – Up until recently, I probably wouldn’t have considered singing a stim but given how regulating I find it, I think there are certainly situations where I would consider it stimming. I find the physical sensations of singing so calming and it relaxes me both emotionally and physically but that makes a lot of sense since so many parts of singing are connected to self regulation: the breath control, the way you hold your body, the releasing of emotion, the complete focus (on the sound you’re trying to create, in this case)… I will never not be obsessed with the fact that my body is an instrument, that it can make music. It absolutely fascinates me and I get such intense joy from operating my body to produce the sound I want to create. It may be the only way I feel truly connected to my body, something that I have historically struggled with, so it doesn’t surprise me that it creates such a physical sense of joy every time I sing. I’m always finding new songs that I love to sing but some of my long time favourites include ‘California’ by Kina Grannis, ‘She Used To Be Mine’ and ‘Little Voice’ by Sara Bareilles, ‘Radio Silence’ by Natalie Hemby, and ‘Unsteady’ by X Ambassadors.

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Self Harm Awareness Month 2024

TW: Discussions of self harm.

Yes, I know I’m late and that Self Harm Awareness Month was March but my recent post (about the disastrous ending of my therapy sessions) took up so much time and energy and emotion that I just didn’t have the space to write anything else and certainly not in time for the end of March. But I did post this as part of my recent foray into TikTok and I thought it summed up my journey pretty well so it seemed fitting to share it here…


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It was a moving experience to see so many people sharing such vulnerable stories but I think the experiences posted likely skewed towards: all of the stories that I saw ended positively, with the individual celebrating being clean of self harm for however long. And that’s great, don’t get me wrong; it’s amazing to see people share how hard they’ve worked to move forward, to process and heal and recover. But I think it’s often the case that those who are still struggling don’t feel able to share due to judgement or comparison to those ‘further down the road’ or because their stories aren’t traditional ones. I don’t consider mine exactly traditional and I think that’s because my self harm use has mostly been due to my Autism and my difficulty regulating my emotions. So I think it’s important to share that experience, as well as the fact that I don’t know what it will look like in the future and how that is a frightening concept.

I don’t have the answers and, in this season of my life, I don’t have any poignant, wise words either. I’m just taking it day by day because even a single day can feel overwhelming right now.

2023 in Review

TW: Discussion of depression, self harm, and suicidal thoughts and ideation.

Much like last year, I have no idea how to sum up this year. I don’t think I have it in me to write a long post that involves such intense emotions and I think that, if I wait until I do, we might all be waiting a very long time so I’m just going to write until I can’t anymore and that’ll be that. It’s just too hard.


While there have been good moments (some of which can be seen in the collage below), it’s been a fucking painful year and it’s now the third New Year’s Eve that I’ve spent crippled by depression, suicidal thoughts, and overwhelming fear and dread around the future. I’m pretty sure I’m in full autistic burnout and I feel like I’m living in a fog. Last year, I think I described my depression as a drought but, this year, I think the better metaphor is drowning: I feel like I’m drowning in this depression and I have so little energy left that staying afloat is feeling more and more impossible. I’m so tired. I’m tired of trying so hard, of feeling like I’m not trying hard enough; I’m tired of feeling this way, of feeling like things will never get better, like there’s no point in even trying to feel better because there’s nothing worth feeling better for. It just feels like there’s so much bad in the world, so much agony, that it isn’t a world I want to live in. I feel broken; I feel like a prime example of a defective human being. There have been good things, like I said, but it seems like they can never just be good things: there’s always so much bad or hard twisted up in them that enjoying them isn’t as straightforward as it sounds. I miss feeling safe. I miss feeling safe to feel things.

A big, hard part of this year has been that I started taking Phenelzine again, for the third time. I didn’t want to and I felt coerced by the circumstances to take it. I was so angry about it all that I made potentially my most dramatic, self destructive move so far: I cut my face and then, when it got infected, I was so reluctant to treat it that I’ve ended up with a fairly visible scar. The most confusing part of it was that, even though I didn’t want anyone to bring it up, I was surprised that no one did; it seemed like the kind of thing that would trigger some alarm. Just as I imagined voicing consistent suicidal would but no one’s really commented on that either. It only makes the experience more isolating and lonely. But back to the Phenelzine: while it helped me get out of bed and go out now and then, it hasn’t had the same impact that it’s previously had on my mood, even on the higher dose. And that means that I’ve officially run out of medication options. I’ve been going to therapy consistently, for the most part, but I feel like it’s getting harder and harder; there have been sessions where I’ve left feeling traumatised. We’ll be trying something different in the new year but I’m struggling to feel hopeful, but that’s not specific to just therapy.

I look at the collage I made for this year and although I remember each of these moments, I feel disconnected from them; the emotions feel dulled. A lot has happened, somewhat to my surprise…

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I went to multiple small shows; I went to hydrotherapy religiously and started physiotherapy; I got adopted by a puppy and then had my heart broken when she was taken away; I went to Nashville for Tin Pan South; my application for an Autism Service Dog was successful; I released my single, ‘House on Fire,’ as well as creating all of the visuals for it; I was diagnosed with Fibromyalgia; I went to art exhibitions (and even helped to build my favourite art piece, Breathing Room); I hung out with friends, online and in real life; I travelled to Germany for the wedding of one of my best friends and was reunited with multiple friends that I hadn’t seen in years; I got to hang out with some of my American friends when they performed here; I fought for Taylor Swift tickets; I had my heart broken again when the rescue puppy we applied for was homed with someone else; I went to some amazing concerts; I met Amanda Tapping again and she’s still one of the most wonderful people I’ve ever known; I started performing again; I read books and watched movies and TV shows that are now among my favourites; I adopted a puppy (which still doesn’t sound real to me); I swam 5km for Mind, raising over £600; I went to multiple Maisie Peters shows and got to meet her too; one of my cats got very sick and we had to nurse her back to health; my aunt died; I changed heart medications; and I worked on lots of different musical and academic work. I know all of these things happened; I remember them clearly but it’s like watching them play on a screen. I know these memories are mine but they don’t feel like mine. It’s weird and sad.

I’m so tired. I’m tired of masking but I don’t know how to stop. I feel broken – physically, mentally, and emotionally – but as hard as I try, it never feels like enough. Over ten years later, it should be getting better not worse, right?


I don’t know what else to say. Life feels increasingly scary, internally and externally, and I just feel too broken to manage. I don’t know how people walk around without all of the fear and grief and anxiety that I do, that I see as such an intrinsic part of being human. As I wrote last year, “I don’t know what tomorrow brings. I don’t know what I want it to. I didn’t want this year. I didn’t expect to still be here and I’m not happy or pleased or grateful for that. I feel pathetic and stupid and cowardly; I feel broken beyond repair. I feel frozen, overwhelmed by all of these big feelings. If feelings could kill you, I think these would have.