Autism, Pain, and a Killer Cat

I believe I have a high pain threshold.  I have read mentions of this in autism groups, but I don’t know how to gauge what is a high pain threshold since I can’t experience another person’s normal physical pain.  The only direct reference I have received is from a doctor doing a procedure who said I have a high pain threshold.

Due to my issues with proprioception, the awareness of my body in space in relation to other objects, I bump into things a lot.  Hubby will ask me about a big purple, yellow bruise and ask, “Owwww, how did you get that one?”  My usual reply is, “I don’t know.”  Evidently, I should have noticed at the time I hit something.

I know if something is serious because I am in pain right now.  This is the story:

One of our daughters came to stay with us for a while with her cat, named “Cat.”  Syracuse, our huge 20 lb+ Maine Coon cat, hates Cat with a fury.  He will stop at nothing to attack her.  Cat stays in our daughter’s room, but daughter left the door open last night, and the fight started.  I jumped out of bed to stop the fight.  I couldn’t find the water spray bottle, so I did like I usually do with Syracuse, I picked him up.

What was I thinking!?

Picking up a cat in a rage is a bad idea.  He bit into my arm so hard that he tore a piece of my wrist open on the soft underside.  Daughter got him out of her room with a broom.  He bit into that broom and wouldn’t let go of it as daughter pulled him out.

In the bathroom some yellow fat drops were oozing out of the inch-long rip in my skin, which I was quite fascinated with.  It hurt, but it should have hurt a lot.  Hubby cleaned it up and pulled the skin together with band-aids.  I wanted to look at the cut.

Today it hurts like hell.  I thought at the time I should have gotten stitches, but I don’t think that is the problem.  It’s swelling and getting red on the whole bottom side of my wrist, and the veins leading to the cut are throbbing, so I suppose I have an infection.

After I’m done writing, hubby is going remove the band-aids, clean the area, and put hydrogen peroxide on it to kill some infection.  It’s quite fascinating to watch hydrogen peroxide foam up on a cut.  Maybe you think I’m morbid for being interested in big cuts and hydrogen peroxide, but I get fascinated with the littlest things.  I have seen this as a regular thing in children, but perhaps the autistic ones don’t want to be robbed of their fascination by a band-aid.

Knowing that I sometimes don’t feel pain that I should prompts me to be more aware of even a twinge of pain somewhere because it could be something a little more wrong.  That does not mean living as a hypochondriac, as you can tell because I didn’t go get stitches, but it means that I have to be more aware.

I must mention that Syracuse is the cuddliest cat, so much so, that I call him “my baby.”

About Eileen Parker 100 Articles
Support a starving writer, by buying my current book, The Weighted Blanket Guide, on Amazon. I'm a writer working on my fourth book. I live in the Twin Cities with my husband. Between us, we have four children.