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Dramatic? No, I'm autistic

When Sara Gibbs was diagnosed with autism at 30 it explained so much, she tells Gaby Wine

June 24, 2021 12:04
Sara Gibbs 3 (c) Juliet McKee Photography.jpg
5 min read

I always joke that I was misdiagnosed as Jewish,” laughs Sara Gibbs part way through our interview. It’s one of a number of excellent jokes, befitting someone who writes comedy for a living.

We’re talking about her experience of growing up with autism, but discovering she was autistic only when she was 30, three years ago.

Gibbs is great company, highly articulate and very funny. She is chatting animatedly over Zoom from her living room, apologising for dabbing her eyes, which are sensitive to the light coming though the tiny gap in the curtains. “Usually, it would be almost pitch black in here, so my eyes are watering and watering and watering.” After our interview, she will need to take a rest.

Hypersensitivity to sensory input, frequently experienced by autistic people, is one of the challenges Gibbs describes in her memoir, Drama Queen which is published this week. The book, which is both funny and fascinating in equal measure, stole its title from people’s perception of Gibbs. “When you’re going through sensory stuff — food aversions, light sensitivity, noise sensitivity and smells, people perceive you as always complaining. People thought I was just spoilt or lazy or couldn’t be bothered.”