Saturday, March 23, 2024

"I Will Die on this Hill": Where Was This Book Twenty Years Ago?

 (Or any decent reading on autism for that matter. Man, Doctor Google was cruel in the early 2000s!)

I Will Die on this Hill was exactly the book I've been needing, as someone who often feels uncomfortably caught in the Uncivil War between autistic adults and parents of autistic children. (With I admit, perhaps from being so late diagnosed myself, a tendency to sympathize with the parents.) It just lays out so perfectly how both sides can listen to and learn from each other, and why they need to.

I want to save some quotes I found especially resonant, in no particular order (and somewhat edited to spare my fingers.)

I live at the convergence of two dualities in which parenting autistic children overlaps with being an autistic person. Sometimes these factors "play" well together. Other times, they seem to compete and/or work against one another. In either scenario, overall society is not as accepting nor as accommodating as we need it to be, and that can be hard. I have learned that being autistic does not magically grant me a sense of comfort if my child is hurting and in need and I can't always discern what's going on so that I can help. Similarly, being a parent of autistic children doesn't automatically conjure up a personal, invisible barrier shielding me from the realities that autistic adults without children face.


Yes. All of this.  (A frequent wry moment from my visits to parent support groups -- being the only one there who can't find someone to talk to.)


In practice, a social model of disability referencing a relational worldview would treat and autistic child quite differently than we currently do. The social model would explore a child's needs in a way that builds trust... Rather than using deficit-based language that makes children feel bad (yes they hear it, and yes they feel bad), evaluators would use affirming, strengths-based language while identify needed support.

"Yes they hear it, and yes they feel bad" -- oh man, we screwed up so royally in this regard. Take it from me, a person who seems in "their own little world" is still in yours.  

Autistic adults need to internalize the fact that, overall, non-autistic parents of autistic children are universally whiny, narcissistic 'autism warrior' martyrs who resent their children--even though youmight perceive them as such sometimes. Neither are they inherently angelic 'special' parents who should be lauded for their very existence, even though you might percieve them as such sometimes.... Regardless of how autistic adults might feel about non-autistic parents of autistic children, these parents ain't going nowhere--not when it comes to their children whom they love. No matter how much advocacy you do and how much you care, that parent and their children are a package deal, period. 

Your values do not have to change, but what can change is your perception of anner of engaging with the people who matter so much to the children in our community--their families, which include non-autistic parents. You must remember that they are human beings, who might not always say things the 'right' way, who are surrounded by hordes of misinformation, navigating circumstances in which they have no blueprint and no intrinsic knowledge, all while trying to ensure their children are cared for and have their needs met.


I don't want this to get unreadable, so going to stop here and hopefully do a part 2 or more.  

 

No comments:

Post a Comment