North Smithfield author Michal Maoz
looks over her painting, which she calls ‘Falling for
Me,’ which is on the cover of her new book entitled
‘The Alien In Me,’ a book of poetry chronicling her
struggle with Asperger’s Syndrome, at her home in
North Smithfield Wednesday. Call Photo/Ernest A. Brown
North Smithfield woman’s book reflects her struggle
with Asperger’s Syndrome
By JON BAKER
NORTH SMITHFIELD -- It’s a riveting story, how Michal
Maoz has spun her intense suffering from Asperger’s
Syndrome into a major triumph.
Now a 35-year-old wife and mother to two teenagers,
Maoz recently fulfilled a longtime dream of becoming a
published author.
On July 14, the news that her first book — a stunningly
revealing 244-page compilation titled “The Alien in Me:
Poetry by a Person with Asperger’s Syndrome” — had become
reality brought both smiles and tears.
She refers to it as “a poetic autobiography of key moments
in my lifetime, my point of view of someone with
Asperger’s.
“This is one of the happiest times of my life,” laughed
Maoz, a native of Israel. “Of course, the day I got
married (to Itzik Maoz, a software consultant for a
Lincoln firm) was one, and the days I had my children were
two others, but now I’m an author. It feels terrific! I
think it’s slowly starting to sink in, that I’m moving
forward, that I’m getting there. I feel like I’ve finally
been given a chance to show myself.
“This is an opportunity for me to shed the mask I know
I’ve been wearing for years,” she added. “Now I can show
the world who I am, what I’m all about. By doing that, I’m
hoping to help others understand my world, as well as
others on the Autism spectrum. This is for those who wish
they could express themselves, but are unable.”
The book consists of approximately 150 poems, including
“Old Memory;” “Fat Girl;” “Don’t Cry!;” “Child With No
Childhood;” and, naturally, “The Alien in Me.” Maoz also
prefaces each section with a short story indicating the
reasons behind the verses.
All come back to the definition of Asperger’s: a form of
high-functioning Autism; some of its major symptoms
include social difficulties, such as the inability to read
facial expressions or body language; misunderstanding
social rules and cues and problems making friends.
Amazingly, Maoz wasn’t diagnosed with the syndrome until
seven years ago, not long after a doctor decided her
oldest had the same disorder (as was the “baby” two years
later). When informed, Maoz felt like a mammoth weight had
been pulled from her shoulders. She finally knew why she
had suffered such internal and external torture since
childhood.
***
Maoz knew as a little girl growing up in a suburb of Tel
Aviv she wasn’t like other children. She used to wonder,
while girls her age played hopscotch and with dolls, why
she often trekked by her lonesome into the fields to climb
trees or chase bugs.
“When I was about 10, I decided I wanted to play with the
other children, but that was difficult because they
wouldn’t accept me,” she said. “They considered me
annoying and different … They didn’t like me because I
didn’t follow their social rules. I followed my own. I had
to win every game.
“I was crying almost every day, and it got to a point
where I was being bullied,” she added. “I remember they’d
include me in a game of ‘Hide & Seek,’ but they wouldn’t
‘seek,” and I’d be left there for hours. Other times, I’d
get beaten up.
“Because of all that, I’d crawl into my own little shell.
I’d sit in my room and contemplate why I was so unusual. I
always had very deep thoughts, like ‘Is there a God?’ I
also wondered if I was an alien, if I was put here on
Earth as an experiment from another world to see if I
could learn proper human behavior: How to speak, how to
behave with people. Simply, I felt I couldn’t.
“I was a total outsider. Even my mother and sister made me
feel that way. Those were horrible experiences.”
To comfort herself, she’d retreat to her bedroom. As a
four-year-old (she lost her dad in the Yom Kippur War in
1973 at nine months old), she found solace in drawing and
coloring. At seven, she began composing poems about not
fitting in.
“Writing became an outlet for me,” she noted. “It helped
me cope with all the feelings I had of being alone, and
fear, sadness, disappointment and my few moments with
happiness. Back then, I couldn’t label those emotions, but
I could feel them, so I wrote them down.”
***
As she grew older, Maoz spent an exorbitant amount of time
watching TV – including sitcoms such as “Happy Days,”
“Mork & Mindy,” “The Facts of Life” and “Saved By the
Bell.”
“With all the bullying in school and outside it, I found a
solution,” she said with spunk. “All of those hours alone
in my room got me thinking, ‘Why don’t you change a few
things about yourself for acceptance?’ I started with my
laugh, which everyone seemed to hate. I tried new ones
from those I watched on television.
“My mother hated it,” she added. “She couldn’t understand
why I was using a fake laugh. She’d say, ‘Tafsiki!’
(Stop!), but I kept doing it to be more like others. I
also studied the encyclopedia and dictionary, and read
many books. That also helped me learn a lot about social
interaction, and I tried to implement what I learned in my
life.”
The ploy worked a bit, but not enough for a dramatic
change.
When she reached high school in Herzeliya, the studying
paid off, as officials placed Maoz in an advanced
scholastic program, mainly science-based.
“I had a hard time; academically, I felt more stress than
I had before, but there was the social component, too,”
she offered. “When I was 15, I went into a depression, and
if affected my schoolwork. My grades went down, and I
begged my mom to talk to the principal and get me out of
the horrible science courses.
“When she found out I had been crying all the time – I did
a good job of hiding it – my mom took me to therapy, and I
eventually got better – with a lot of work on my own
head,” she continued. “It didn’t last.”
Upon graduation, she was drafted by the Israeli Defense
Force, like all 18-year-old Israelis, in 1990. Just eight
months later, she became sick with a malady no doctor
could analyze. The good news: She met a strapping young
medic on a team-building seminar in the desert, and
immediately fell in love.
“I had three primary childhood dreams: The first was to
live in America; the second to publish a book of poetry;
and the third to marry and be a young mom,” she said. “I
actually told my mother about those dreams when I was a
child, and she just laughed them off.”
After Iztik left the Israeli Army, the couple – with their
two youngsters – moved to New England. Both parents
admittedly have experienced hard times with their
children, but could deal rather well, given Michal’s
history with Asperger’s.
***
She later began creating paintings – call them visual
depictions of her poetry – and then a line of jewelry with
the same themes of insecurity and pain. Her signature
painting? “The Mask,” which shows a teen-age girl’s
sadness, her left eye covered by a theater-like mask, one
with a grin for the outside to see.
“’The Alien in Me’” was chosen for the title because I
still feel that person inside me, though not as often,”
Maoz explained. “Even though I did change myself, I still
feel like I’m not me; that is, like I still wear that
mask. There are times I still feel like an alien.
“Nevertheless, I did a series of 25 paintings that I call
the ‘Aspie Series,’ and all relate to poems I’ve written
about how those with Asperger’s feel,” she continued. “I
hope to make the series into a second book, with the poems
and paintings in it. This first one, though, is a thrill.
It took me 10 years to compile all of them, plus some
translated from Hebrew. I’ve written hundreds of them
since I was 7, and – in fact – I have enough in Hebrew for
at least two books.
“I started making jewelry as well, and it’s because I
thought that would be another way to raise awareness of
Asperger’s, my company (Aurtistic-Spectrum.com) and my
speaking engagements.”
Noted Iztik: “Her book ($19.95 in local stores) is now on
sale in Europe, Japan and Canada, and I think it’s
amazing, courageous and fulfilling for my wife. I couldn’t
be more proud of her.”
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