Autism Diva clued me into this fantastic bit of -- poetry, observation, what? -- from the
Ballastexistenz blog, from which I have pulled out what I think are the most poignant and mind-blowing bits:
Questions for Neurotypicals
How have you learned to compensate for being nearly incapable of directly perceiving your surroundings?
Surely you must miss the all-encompassing joy of simple perceptual experiences. Don't try to tell me that all your canned, pre-filtered experiences of sunsets and the like hold a candle to watching a tiny spider crawl across the carpet or rubbing a fuzzy blanket on your face. Nobody would believe anything that ridiculous, you're just trying to romanticize neurotypicality.
How do you deal with being unable to perceive minds different from your own? Doesn't that limit you socially?
Have you learned to make real conversation with strangers instead of just measuring them up socially and moving on?
And here is my own send-up to all those who insist that autism is less than, that autistics can't connect, and need to be fixed. This, for those who don't know, is Nat, my 16 year-old who has a pretty severe degree of autism, embracing, quite willingly, his teacher, Maureen:
