ASD

Measuring a Life in Coffee Spoons: A Neurodivergent (Re)Reading of T.S. Eliot’s ‘The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock’

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Sonnet Sleuths


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Measuring a Life in Coffee Spoons: A Neurodivergent (Re)Reading of T.S. Eliot's 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock'



 

Introduction: Finding Myself in Prufrock's Paralysis



Have you ever felt trapped between the desire to connect and the paralysing fear of being truly seen? When I first encountered T.S. Eliot's "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" (1915), it was more than literature—it was a mirror. But not for who I am now, and some might argue, not for who I was then. One thing is for sure, as my teacher read it, I was forever in love with poetry. As a queer, disabled, neurodivergent educator, I found in Prufrock's voice an echo of my own struggles with masking, social anxiety, and the exhausting performance of fitting in.



This analysis is part of reclaiming my literary voice after years of others profiting from my work. If you're new to Sonnet Sleuths, welcome to a community where poetry becomes a lens for understanding ourselves and our world through diverse perspectives.


 

Quick Summary: What You Need to Know

 

  • Form: Dramatic monologue disguised as a love song
  • Core Themes: Social paralysis, masking, failed connection, time anxiety
  • Why It Matters: Speaks to neurodivergent experiences, gender performance, and modern social anxiety
  • Key Innovation: Birth of modernist poetry through fragmentation and stream-of-consciousness

 

Prufrock's World: The Architecture of Anxiety


 

The poem opens with an epigraph from Dante's Infernoa soul in Hell speaks only because they believe their confession will never reach the living world. This establishes Prufrock's defining need: a witness who won't judge or expose him.

 

 

The urban landscape mirrors his internal state:

 

  • "muttering retreats"
  • "restless nights in one-night cheap hotels"
  • "streets that follow like a tedious argument"

 

These aren't just descriptions—they're what Eliot called "objective correlatives," external images that embody internal emotional states. For those of us who experience sensory overwhelm or social exhaustion, these environments feel viscerally familiar.



 

The Yellow Fog: Paralysis Made Visible

 

 

The yellow fog, personified as a timid cat, becomes the poem's most powerful metaphor:


"The yellow fog that rubs its back upon the window-panes...
Licked its tongue into the corners of the evening...
Curled once about the house, and fell asleep."



This isn't dramatic weather, it's quiet suffocation. Like Prufrock himself, the fog is everywhere yet passive, moving without purpose. For neurodivergent readers, this perfectly captures the fog of executive dysfunction or social overwhelm that keeps us from action despite a desperate desire to connect.


 

 

The Performance of Self: Masking and Gender

 

 

"Preparing a Face": The Exhaustion of Masking

 

Prufrock's need "to prepare a face to meet the faces that you meet" resonates deeply with masking, the exhausting performance many neurodivergent and queer people know intimately. Every social interaction requires careful calibration:

 

"There will be time to murder and create,
And time for all the works and days of hands
That lift and drop a question on your plate"

 

The violence of "murder and create" reveals how masking feels, killing parts of ourselves to create acceptable versions for public consumption.

 

 

Fragmented Perception: When Connection Feels Impossible


 

Prufrock cannot perceive women as whole people, seeing only:

 

  • "perfume from a dress"
  • "arms that are braceleted and white and bare"
  • "the skirts that trail along the floor"

 

 

This fragmentation reveals more than misogynyit shows how overwhelming social interaction can fragment our perception when we're struggling to process human connection. From a feminist lens, it also exposes how patriarchal conditioning reduces women to parts, even in supposedly sensitive men.


 

 

"Not Prince Hamlet": Impostor Syndrome and Secondary Status


 

Prufrock's self-comparison devastates:


 

"No! I am not Prince Hamlet, nor was meant to be;
Am an attendant lord... Full of high sentence, but a bit obtuse"

 

 

He casts himself as Polonius—not the tragic hero but the expendable supporting character. For those of us who have internalised messages about being "too much" or "not enough,"  this resignation to secondary status in our own lives cuts deep.

 

 

 

Time, Routine, and the Unlived Life


 

Coffee Spoons and Crushing Routine


 

"I have measured out my life with coffee spoons"


 

This single line crystallises the tragedy — existence reduced to safe repetition rather than authentic experience. The contrast between abundant time ("there will be time") and urgent scarcity reveals the paralysis of chronic procrastination, particularly familiar to individuals with ADHD, who are often caught between hyperfocus and time blindness.


 

 

The Overwhelming Question Never Asked



Throughout, Prufrock circles an "overwhelming question" he cannot voice. Whether read as a romantic proposition, an existential query, or the question of authentic self-revelation, its very unaskability defines his tragedy.

 

 

 

Contemporary Resonance: Prufrock in Digital Spaces


 

Social Media as Modern Drawing Room


 

Prufrock's anxieties feel prescient in our digital age:


  • His "bald spot" and "thin" limbs anticipate selfie culture's body scrutiny
  • "Visions and revisions" mirror the endless editing of online personas
  • The women "talking of Michelangelo" become LinkedIn influencers performing intelligence


Yet online spaces also offer what Prufrock couldn't find—niche communities where difference is celebrated, where we might hear the mermaids sing to us after all.

 

 

 

Intersectional Readings: Beyond Universal Anxiety

 

 

Queer Coding and Hidden Selves

 

 

LGBTQIA+ readers recognise the coded language of concealment. Prufrock’s terror of being “formulated, sprawling on a pin” speaks to the violence of being outed or exposed. His conviction that “I do not think they will sing to me” echoes the generational trauma of exclusion from love and beauty.

 

Poetry, Music, and the Power of Naming

 

 

My own journey toward understanding my gender and neurodivergence was shaped not only by poetry but by music. For years, I masked my difference to survive, until I heard the lyrics from Hurray for the Riff Raff’s “Pa’lante” in 2017:

 

 

“Well lately, don’t understand what I am
Treated as a fool
Not quite a woman or a man
Well I don’t know
I guess I don’t understand the plan”

 

 

These words gave me the clarity and permission I needed to embrace my nonbinary, pansexual, and asexual identity. Like Eliot’s verse, today’s music is living poetry, offering language, validation, and solidarity for those of us whose stories are rarely told.

 

 

Class, Race, and the Limits of Universality

 

 

 

While often seen as universal, Prufrock’s anxiety is actually specific — he moves through privileged spaces (such as tea parties and cultural references) even though he feels excluded. Contemporary analysis must consider whose anxieties are canonised as “universal” and whose are marginalised. Some critics claim that Prufrock’s anxieties are universal, while others view them as tied to his social class, gender, or sexual orientation. Feminist and queer perspectives complicate the notion of universality, revealing how the poem both reflects and challenges the limitations of early twentieth-century masculinity. Recognising these debates, we understand Prufrock not as a simple figure but as a lens for exploring broader issues of identity, power, and belonging.

 

 

Literary Innovation: Fragmenting the Modern Self

 

 

Eliot’s techniques revolutionised poetry:

 

  • Stream of consciousness captures anxious thought patterns
  • Irregular rhyme mirrors psychological instability
  • Dense allusion creates cultural exhaustion
  • Fragmentation reflects the modern self’s disintegration

 

 

These innovations provided us with language to describe experiences that Victorian poetry couldn’t capture — the fractured, overwhelming nature of modern consciousness.

 

 

Personal Reflection: Why This Matters

 

 

When I (finally) discovered my neurodivergence, Prufrock suddenly made sense. Well, a new, nuanced and previously undetected sense instead. His paralysis wasn’t weakness; it was the exhaustion of existing in spaces not built for minds like ours. His fragments weren’t just modernist technique; they were how overwhelming situations actually feel when you’re processing them differently.

 

 

In my work with neurodivergent students through DW Tutoring, I see Prufrock’s struggles daily: brilliant minds convinced they’re “attendant lords,” measuring lives in coffee spoons because authentic existence feels too dangerous.

 

 

But unlike Prufrock, we’re building communities where the mermaids do sing to us, where our differences are strengths, where questions can be asked, and where the connection doesn’t require masks.

 

 

Conclusion: Prufrock’s Gift and Our Response

 

 

“The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” endures because it articulates the inarticulate, the terror of being seen, the exhaustion of performance, the grief of an unlived life. It gives us language for experiences that often feel unspeakable.

 

 

But we need not be Prufrock. In naming these fears, in finding community, in choosing authenticity despite the terror, we can hear the mermaids singing, each to each. And yes, they will sing to us.




The Symphony of Woodpeckers

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Poems

 

 

The Symphony of Woodpeckers

 

 

In the forest's heart, where shadows play,

Woodpeckers thrive in their unique way.

From Picus viridis, green and bright,

To others that grace the woods with might.

 

 

European Green Woodpecker (Picus viridis)

 

In emerald hues, the green woodpecker,

With rhythmic beats, it marks its sector,

pü-pü-pü-pü-pü-pü-pü,

A melody both wild and true.



In meadows lush, it hunts for ants,

With probing tongue, it takes its chance.

It drills for prey in hollowed trees,

Where insects dwell, it finds its ease.


 

Downy Woodpecker (Picoides pubescens)

 

Small and spry, with a gentle call,

Its tiny beak, a tool for all,

*pik* it cries, with whinnying fall,

In suburban parks, it stands tall.



It flits through trees with nimble grace,

In orchards sweet, it finds its place.

On suet feeders, it will dine,

In winter months, a lifeline fine.


 

Hairy Woodpecker (Picoides villosus)

 

Larger kin with a bill so long,

Its drumming fast, a rapid song,

*peek!* it calls, a sharp, strong tone,

In deeper woods, it finds its home.



With powerful pecks, it drills for prey,

In towering pines, it spends its day.

It scales the bark to find its feast,

In beetle larvae, it finds peace.

 


Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus)

 

A giant with a crest of flame,

Its powerful peck, a forest claim,

tap̚tap̚tap̚, it carves its niche,

In ancient trees, where secrets stitch.



In forests old, it digs for grubs,

With mighty force, it splits the shrubs.

Its laughter rings through wooded halls,

In courtship flights, it swoops and calls.

 


Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus)

 

With spotted belly and a bib of black,

It forages ground, no need to hack,

kyü-kyü-kyück, it calls with grace,

In open fields, it finds its place.



On grassy plains, it seeks its feast,

With ants and beetles, it finds peace.

It drums on ground in rhythmic dance,

In courtship's spell, it takes its chance.

 


Three-toed Woodpecker (Picoides tridactylus)

 

In northern woods, where spruces stand,

It scales the bark with skilled hand,

Removing strips to find its prey,

In beetle galleries, it stays.



Its quiet taps are soft and light,

In snowy realms, it finds delight.

 

 

Each species, unique in form and song,

Evolved to fit where they belong,

From beak to call, each niche they fill,

A testament to nature's will.



With varied beaks and feathers bright,

They've carved their paths in day and night.

 

 

In dappled light, where leaves entwine,

Woodpeckers dance, a sight divine,

With every tap̚, a note of grace,

A symphony in nature's space.



So let us laud these feathered sprites,

In morning's glow and moonlit nights,

For woodpeckers, diverse and fair,

Bring music to the woodland air.


 

 

Author's Notes/Comments: 

My inspiration for this poem was a post on social media today by a fellow animal scientist and science communicator acquaintance. We have followed each other for years and whilst her post was in their native German, I was able to discern thay she had head the call of a woodpecker, she had not heard for a long time. So in a not so unusual, avoid what I should be doing, my AuDHD became obsessed with this idea and I had to write a poem. I have tried to prepare a Science Communication type poem that will appeal to poets as well. I hope I have not let down either, or heaven forbid, both sides. 

 

Oh, if you are interested in birding, birdcalls, sounds from nature, conservation etc. you should definitely check out http://xeno-canto.org

 

Here is a link to the calls of the aforementioned Green Woodpecker https://xeno-canto.org/species/picus-viridis