Autistic Hedgehog

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Posts tagged with "ableism"

[Do not make fun | Of the way I talk]
That includes repeating what I said, correcting the way I pronounce something, pointing out how robotic I happen to sound, or mocking the fact that I can’t control the volume of my voice (telling me to please turn down my mic is fine though). 
I game a lot and this is the #1 reason I never use voice chat is because people. make. fun. of. the. way. I. speak. It’s gotten to the point where if I am in a voice chat I avoid speaking as much as possible and sometimes pretend to not have a microphone because I know without fail someone is going to make fun of me. 
And if I say “hey that’s not cool, I’m autistic please don’t make fun of me” it just usually makes people do one of three things a) laugh even harder or b) avoid me after that or c) make excuses and/or accuse me of starting drama.
I’d love to just be able to sit in vent and chat with people like everyone else but with the exception of a very few number, I can’t. Logging on voice chats makes me anxious now. Thanks.
I mean, it’s bad enough that my own family makes fun of the way I speak in the outernet, I can’t even escape from it and focus on killing digital dragons on the internet. This is a thing that permeates even my ESCAPE from everything else.

[Do not make fun | Of the way I talk]

That includes repeating what I said, correcting the way I pronounce something, pointing out how robotic I happen to sound, or mocking the fact that I can’t control the volume of my voice (telling me to please turn down my mic is fine though). 

I game a lot and this is the #1 reason I never use voice chat is because people. make. fun. of. the. way. I. speak. It’s gotten to the point where if I am in a voice chat I avoid speaking as much as possible and sometimes pretend to not have a microphone because I know without fail someone is going to make fun of me. 

And if I say “hey that’s not cool, I’m autistic please don’t make fun of me” it just usually makes people do one of three things a) laugh even harder or b) avoid me after that or c) make excuses and/or accuse me of starting drama.

I’d love to just be able to sit in vent and chat with people like everyone else but with the exception of a very few number, I can’t. Logging on voice chats makes me anxious now. Thanks.

I mean, it’s bad enough that my own family makes fun of the way I speak in the outernet, I can’t even escape from it and focus on killing digital dragons on the internet. This is a thing that permeates even my ESCAPE from everything else.

[I am not
a fate worse than death]
I think this one speaks for itself.

[I am not

a fate worse than death]

I think this one speaks for itself.

All the the nonsensical rhetoric making fun of allistic people is pathetic and wreaks of jealousy. It's stupid as hell. - Autistic against making fun of allistics

Anonymous

Oh yes, that’s right, we’re jealous of people who spread ignorance and lies about us.

We’re jealous of people who imply it takes superpowers to raise us, who act like loving us is abnormal, who want to wipe us off the face of the planet.

We’re jealous of people who say we have no emotions, no empathy, no intellect, and no value. 

We’re jealous of people who murder us, who institutionalize us, who force us into painful and traumatic therapies, who encourage us to die rather than get life saving surgery because our lives are worth so very little. 

We’re jealous of people dictate what is normal and use that to belittle us, to kill us, to make us hate ourselves, to take away our autonomy. 

We’re jealous of people who use our very being, what we are at our core, as an insult to belittle privileged douchebags or, even worse, people who are just enjoying what they love.

You’re right! It all makes sense now! I can see clearly!

Pfft. What I see, clearly, is that you’re ignorant and you are the one who is nonsensical. “Making fun of” is not the same thing as “calling out” and any person with sense knows which one we’re doing here. We are the ones being made fun of and worse, and we have every right to express our dissatisfaction and distaste with that. 

I will not sit here and be policed by an asshat who wants me to sit down and let my oppressors stomp all over me. Trololololol your ass out of here. 

[Defeat Autism Now!
Relax! I’m not a boss monster in a JRPG!]
But if I was, I’d be load-bearing, and you’d have 30 seconds to escape the extremely large, labyrinthine building you found me at the center of.
Seriously, of all the autism groups that teamed up to form Autism $peaks, Defeat Autism Now! has always been the one with the name that creeps me out the most. Not cure, not treat, defeat, as if autism is some hulking boss monster in a JRPG (Japanese role-playing game, for those of you not in the know). It’s spine-shivering hyperbole of Orwellian proportions. 
The implications terrify me. The idea that who I am, that something integral to my very personality, is a thing that needs defeating, is staggering. Autism is not a disease. Despite the ableist fucks who compare it to cancer, AIDS and cystic fibrosis, it’s not an illness; it’s simply a difference. The idea that differences need to be erased and defeated…that is the nightmarish rhetoric from which the most horrific dystopias are born. And right now, entire groups of people are out there pushing for one. 
Much scarier than any boss monster I ever faced down. 

[Defeat Autism Now!

Relax! I’m not a boss monster in a JRPG!]

But if I was, I’d be load-bearing, and you’d have 30 seconds to escape the extremely large, labyrinthine building you found me at the center of.

Seriously, of all the autism groups that teamed up to form Autism $peaks, Defeat Autism Now! has always been the one with the name that creeps me out the most. Not cure, not treat, defeat, as if autism is some hulking boss monster in a JRPG (Japanese role-playing game, for those of you not in the know). It’s spine-shivering hyperbole of Orwellian proportions. 

The implications terrify me. The idea that who I am, that something integral to my very personality, is a thing that needs defeating, is staggering. Autism is not a disease. Despite the ableist fucks who compare it to cancer, AIDS and cystic fibrosis, it’s not an illness; it’s simply a difference. The idea that differences need to be erased and defeated…that is the nightmarish rhetoric from which the most horrific dystopias are born. And right now, entire groups of people are out there pushing for one. 

Much scarier than any boss monster I ever faced down. 

[“Autistics are the nicest people you’ll ever meet because they don’t know how to hate people.”
Yes, because we’re actually made out of magical hate-proof fairy dust instead of water, electricity and skin cells like everyone else.]
Could we just…stop with this kind of nonsense, please? Autistic people are people. Like any other people, we can (and do) learn hate, and we learn all kinds of hate. Okay? It really is just that simple. Occam’s Razor: Autistic people are people and people can hate so autistic people can hate. 
There we go. We can stop this silliness now. 

[“Autistics are the nicest people you’ll ever meet because they don’t know how to hate people.”

Yes, because we’re actually made out of magical hate-proof fairy dust instead of water, electricity and skin cells like everyone else.]

Could we just…stop with this kind of nonsense, please? Autistic people are people. Like any other people, we can (and do) learn hate, and we learn all kinds of hate. Okay? It really is just that simple. Occam’s Razor: Autistic people are people and people can hate so autistic people can hate. 

There we go. We can stop this silliness now. 

I'm so mad. As I was driving home this morning, I saw a van that had written all over it, in blue paint, Autism Speaks propaganda and stuff about autism awareness month, and getting "justice" for their 6-year-old son. The buzzwords they used made it obvious that these people drank the friggin' kool aid. I felt like I got a momentary glimpse at someone allowing their own son's future to be compromised in the name of self-martyrhood. I wish I could have helped the kid somehow.

…justice!?

What even…justice!? Justice from what? How? I just…I do not get allistic people sometimes, I really don’t. 

I don’t blame you for being mad. And I understand wanting to help their kid. Though frankly, I admire your self-restraint. I’m not sure I’d have been able to resist the urge to get out of my car and take my keys to the sides of the Eugenicsmobile. Maybe find something sufficiently sharp to take out the tires. 

[“I’m raising a child with autism. What’s your superpower?”
Resisting the urge to strange every person who thinks they’re Captain Good Parent for raising an autistic child.]
Could we please just stop acting like raising an autistic child is something that requires being bitten by a radioactive spider or being a bulletproof alien from the planet Krypton? Please? Because it’s really fucking insulting to have people say things that imply that the very act of raising you requires greater than human ability. 
P.S. Before any allistics try to crawl into my inbox to gaslight me with how I don’t understand what’s really being said here, I’d like to make it abundantly clear that I have no fucks to give. If your intentions are really so good, fucking think harder next time about how you sound when you say this shit! 

[“I’m raising a child with autism. What’s your superpower?”

Resisting the urge to strange every person who thinks they’re Captain Good Parent for raising an autistic child.]

Could we please just stop acting like raising an autistic child is something that requires being bitten by a radioactive spider or being a bulletproof alien from the planet Krypton? Please? Because it’s really fucking insulting to have people say things that imply that the very act of raising you requires greater than human ability. 

P.S. Before any allistics try to crawl into my inbox to gaslight me with how I don’t understand what’s really being said here, I’d like to make it abundantly clear that I have no fucks to give. If your intentions are really so good, fucking think harder next time about how you sound when you say this shit! 

[“My son has autism but he’s not autistic!”
So does he keep it in a jar on his shelf or something?]
No, I’m not kidding or exaggerating. This is the sort of shit drifting around the autism tag right now. Rhetoric like this. 
This is why “person with autism” is such problematic language. Some parents try to defend it with claims that it’s because they see their child as a person first WHARGARBL. I suppose there’s something to be said for this person’s honesty. 
Please note that I’m not saying autistic people shouldn’t define themselves as “people with autism” if they so choose. But allistic people have no right to dictate what language gets applied to us. Whether they realize it or not, when they talk about “people with autism” a part of them is trying to separate autism from person, as if autism is some parasite that has taken up residence in their child’s body rather than a very real part of their child. 
This is a genuine–though slightly paraphrased–quote from a person who honestly believes having autism and being autistic are two distinct things. That attitude is vicious and harmful, so when you see autistics speak out against person-first language, know that this is why. 

[“My son has autism but he’s not autistic!”

So does he keep it in a jar on his shelf or something?]

No, I’m not kidding or exaggerating. This is the sort of shit drifting around the autism tag right now. Rhetoric like this. 

This is why “person with autism” is such problematic language. Some parents try to defend it with claims that it’s because they see their child as a person first WHARGARBL. I suppose there’s something to be said for this person’s honesty. 

Please note that I’m not saying autistic people shouldn’t define themselves as “people with autism” if they so choose. But allistic people have no right to dictate what language gets applied to us. Whether they realize it or not, when they talk about “people with autism” a part of them is trying to separate autism from person, as if autism is some parasite that has taken up residence in their child’s body rather than a very real part of their child. 

This is a genuine–though slightly paraphrased–quote from a person who honestly believes having autism and being autistic are two distinct things. That attitude is vicious and harmful, so when you see autistics speak out against person-first language, know that this is why. 

The anon who left a message about the neurologist reminded me of a therapist I had long before I started reading into Aspergers/autism; he would always tell me that everyone struggles about the things I wanted help with (like social problems especially). And I guess he meant that to be comforting, but to me it always just sounded like "Your problems will never get any better" - or else like he just didn't understand what I was trying to say. He was not my therapist for very long.

Anonymous

Rebloggable by request

You type on here with such perfect grammar a large vocabulary and very well educated. By reading your posts you don’t sound like you have autism. I recently worked with kids in year 6 who had autism and not one of them in the class could read or write beyond the level of a preschooler/kindergarten. I guess what I’m asking is how this all works?
 Anonymous

*deep breath*

I’m going to try to answer this without exploding. Try. Because if you’ve actually been reading my posts and, you know, absorbing them, I shouldn’t need to answer this at all.

I think I’ve said on here about a thousand times that autistics are all different and that functioning labels are meaningless. But let’s examine why I might be so different from the small handful of autistic children you know. Since clearly “I am not them” is not a satisfactory answer for you, let’s try some sordid details instead.

(For my Hedgehogs: Trigger warning for ableism, bullying, abuse, suicide and rape.)

Oh, I suppose not all of it is sordid, as such. I wasn’t diagnosed until I was nine. Although I’ve had an ADHD diagnosis practically since I was in the womb, and my mom always felt the doctors missed something about me, no one acted like I was a useless shell of a person who would never amount to anything (that came later). It wasn’t assumed or expected that I couldn’t learn to read, couldn’t learn to write, couldn’t be a well educated individual. Hell, my mom started teaching me to read when I was about three (though admittedly this could be so she wouldn’t have to suffer through Kittens Are Like That again). When I developed my first special interest and started reading books on horses all the time, no one tried to stop me or scold me, because reading was good.

Perhaps these kids you’ve worked with never had those benefits. Perhaps people always treated them like they would never be worthwhile people, like they couldn’t learn to read or write anyway so why bother teaching them? Or perhaps it’s just not their strength. You see, it is mine.

I’m a writer and I’ve been writing for fifteen years, but I’ve always had a particular knack with words. When I was tested in sixth grade, I was found to be four years ahead of my reading level (which was probably not even fully accurate since I was already reading novels for adults at that age). For my entire life I’ve known words—known the meanings to words—that I’d never even heard before. “The world is made up of the greatest composition of numbers and letters.” I said it when I was…four? Five? I couldn’t have been more than six when I once described myself as “feeling like a pile of used up rags.” 

You see? When people talk about autistics with special talents, they think of doing large sums in their head like Rain Man or being able to play a song on the piano after hearing it only once. But my gift, my talent, is words, communication. I don’t communicate well in spite of my autism, but because of it. 

But I mentioned sordid details, didn’t I? And really, the good is nice, but I’m not me without the bad.

It’s funny you should call me “very well educated” because I’m not; not in the typical sense. My world started going to hell after my father committed suicide. By the time I was twelve, I was being viciously bullied in school. I was cornered and hit in the locker room, I was surrounded and harassed at my desk, I got rocks thrown at me on the way home from the bus stop. I didn’t know it for some time, but the other students ganged up to tell lies about me, accusing me of being the bully, telling teachers I called them names and swore at them (I never even swore when I stubbed my toe, back then). I can remember sitting and listening to the lies, opening my mouth to defend myself and being shushed, viciously, by my so-called guidance counselor. 

No one believed me. Even I didn’t believe me. I have one of the sharpest, longest memories you’ll ever encounter, and I spent years thinking I was going out of my mind, because I couldn’t remember any of these things I supposedly did. And I hate talking about it, because people don’t like to believe that children can be that horrible. But they can and they were, and I was surrounded by adults who saw my difficulties expressing “proper” allistic emotions as proof I was lying. Adults I couldn’t look in the face because I could never trust them.

I was home-schooled part of the year in both 6th and 7th grade, and for all of 8th grade. Despite that, I tried going back to school for high school. My education was never steady or stable again. I couldn’t stay full days—by the end of the day I couldn’t breathe from the panic—and I missed a lot of classes. Much of my “very well educated” comes from educating myself. And while all this was happening, when I was only fifteen, I was lying still while my boyfriend raped me, because I’d been so lonely for so long that I was terrified of losing him and the friends he’d brought into my life. I spent years feeling like a stupid little girl who should have known better than to let him do that.

But like I said, I educated myself. And not just in terms of writing or reading or anything else. I educated myself in you. In allistics. I learned to read you better than you can read each other—but even so, I rarely trust my own judgment. I ought to, but my instincts have been so battered by the years of abuse that I can’t. Give me time and I can learn people, learn how they’ll react in a given situation better than they know themselves. And I know me. I spent hours upon hours in introspection, being far more brutally honest with myself than most people will ever be. I know how I act, why I react, why things hurt me…and I’ve put it all together to decode the world. To survive the world.

Do you know how exhausting it is to never be able to let your guard down, ever? To always have to study people, to actively read their non-verbal language, to vet every single thought that comes through your head to make sure it’s not offensive, and to have to do it all at the speed of thought? To smile and look people in the eyes—or fake it—even when you don’t want to? Because that’s my life. I communicate well now verbally too, but I didn’t always. It was only when I was writing that things always fell into place, that I got it right, that I was on the same wavelength as other people. Only when I’m writing that it’s not another long, drawn-out battle to appear just like everyone else. 

That is how it works. How it works it that we’re all different people, but we are people. We’re not empty husks who live our lives unaffected and unchanged by the world around us. Oh, it affects us, all right. It changes us. For many of us, it stuffs us into a box and then praises us while we huddle there, cramped and in pain but doing what society thinks is “right” and “acceptable.” Others are dubbed such worthless lost causes that there’s little point in trying to shove them into the box, because they’ll never go in anyway. Very few people ever care to see what happens if they try to adapt to us instead.