Month: April 2008

  • autism isn't the end of the world

     
    You gotta laugh sometimes.
     
    My youngest is in college pursuing a childhood development degree, with emphasis on special ed. and special needs kids, particularly autism.  I was both surprised and pleased last fall to hear this, and listened to her telling me all kinds of things she was learning in class.  I couldn't help interrupting a little to ask questions, because she was being taught a very typical curriculum of specific symptoms, reactions, treatments, and behavioral programs.  I have a sociology degree and have been trained in assessment, stats, testing, etc, so I'm familiar with the 'lingo' that separates the academic departments.  She was being taught nothing about the disorder as a *spectrum*.  And being young and learning new things, she typically thinks she's got the goods on this new knowledge.  Is she asking ME anything?  No.  Granted, we've learned about my Asperger's rather recently, but she has the benefit of being raised by an ASD stepmom (full time, we had custody).  She doesn't see it now, but I believe part of her instinctual draw and easy relating to autistic kids is because she's been around me since she was two years old.  And I believe I was able to help her with her fetal alcohol syndrome and severe ADHD growing up because I myself am 'different' and learned the hard way from my own mother that 'fixing' and standardizing do more harm than good.
     
    I have been seeing a chiropractor off and on for a spinal injury since last summer.  I sit in the waiting room rocking in the chair, staring up at the lights, rubbing my fingers on the chair arms and wall behind me, sometimes I sit on my hands.  As far as I've noticed, I am the only person I've ever seen in that waiting room who stares up and does things like that.  I do it because it's relaxing, and I could care less what people think of me.  There is a young lady who escorts patients to the rooms with a chart and assesses their progress and pain levels.  During a particularly bad week last fall I was not able to participate in strength training, she said something and I said Well, it's the Asperger's, and she laughed and said You don't have Asperger's, you can look me in the eye.  I stopped dead still, looked her in the eye, and said I'm 46.  I *learned*.
     
    The greatest disservice the media does for Autism Spectrum Disorders is boil 'symptoms' down to a tiny little list of criteria.  It's easy for anyone out there in Joe Public to diagnose autism now.
     
    Maybe I should type this very s-l-o-w-l-y so people can understand.  We are *all around* you.  You wanna see some cool autistic people?  Click these links.
     
     
     
    I don't know how much more succinctly this can be said.  Autism isn't the end of the world.
     

  • Tolerance in Mental Diversity

     

    Vernon Smith, aspie, Nobel Prize winner:  "I think it's different kinds of minds, and the recognition that certain mental deficiencies may actually have some selective advantages in terms of activities. We've lost a lot of the barriers that have to do with skin color and with various other characteristics. But there's still not sufficient recognition of mental diversities. And we don't all have to think alike to be communal and to live in a productive and satisfying world."
     
    ~~~~~~~~~~~
     
    I feel mentally diverse today.    I'm enjoying it.
     
    Someone once said something to me about what I call 'staring off' or 'spazzing out'.  That, apparently, is a waste of time.  I'm not sure what better use I could make of that time- gaming? American Idol? taking out the trash? yapping on a cell phone? reading some kind of celebrity gossip? shopping?
     
    I know there are many people who spend thousands of dollars to visit luxury spas where they can relax, let go, possibly even reach nirvana.
     
    Those people go to extraordinary efforts to do what I do whenever I stare at a textured wall or light or moving water.  I reach Nirvana in seconds.  I wonder if they would pay thousands of dollars to be able to do what comes naturally to me.
     
    And then the coolest ideas suddenly zap through my brain and I feel such a surge of joy over neat thoughts.  Like, what if other universes could bump time around in ours?  If you're not a cosmology fan, don't scoff.  They are actually researching stuff that will probably sound like this.
     
    When I was in 6th grade I realized that a hand waving back and forth fast enough across a projector light could create a faint permanent shadow that light couldn't get completely around.  That's really weird, because it was getting through to hit the screen and dilute the shadow.  Yes, the teacher had to move me away from the projector.
     
    When I was in my 20's I realized that light could slow down and speed up and take shortcuts.  When they discovered fiber optics, I was the first one to say that they would find a way to break the speed of light barrier and that the phone at the other end would ring before you dialed, sure wish I had that documented.  Well, guess what.  Quantum packets are boosted through fiber optic cables in such a way that it ~appears~ that there was a tiny time jump into the future.  But we all know that sometimes a person picks up a phone before it could have conceivably rung after you've dialed, and they say it rang twice...
     
    After that I said Just watch, next they'll find a way to slow light down.  Bing.  A few years ago they successfully slowed down a beam of light in a lab. 
     
    I've never had a college physics class.  I'm not a mathematical savant.  But I love thinking about light.  I mean, photons- they go into your eyeballs, right?  And then what...?  If they bounced out our eyes would glow.  Do we absorb them into our heads?    Am I messing with your brain?
     
    A college professor once asked our class what our first memory was.  I said mine was of sunlight coming through the branches and making the yard bright green and the flowers bright colors.  Turns out that if your first memory is of a thing, you are different than if your first memory is of a person or social situation.  It means you're able to see things in a different way than other people, because I guess most people's first memories involve other people.  He was curious, testing us to see who of us would survive World Religions.  Could we think outside our little boxes?
     
    I didn't even know I had a box.  I think I left it somewhere way back in another galaxy.
     
    I remember someone asking me in an anatomy lab what my favorite thing was, and I said, "The raging debate over the age of the universe."  Because back then, a few years ago, there was a math error and they had the age set at 1 billion some odd years, and the earth is over 4 billion.  But now we know it's over 13 billion years old, so what is my favorite thing now?
     
    Now it's the twisting of time and space stuff.  I have a feeling it's happening all the time, we just don't have a way of measuring it yet.  Like, you're at work, right?  Everyone says it's the longest day...  Or some days fly right by.  What if they really do?  What if our universe is bottlenecking through another universe, hmm?    I sure messed with a few minds at work.  But it might be possible that we can intuitively feel this stuff.
     
    Or, yeah, I could just be weird.  But you know you'd love it on a scifi show.   
     
    Enough for now.
     

  • You May Be an Aspie If...

     
    This list is all my own, from my own experiences.  I got the idea from You Might be an Aspie If..., which I found so comforting and funny that I was able to more quickly adjust to enjoy being who I am once I found out I'm a mental aberration.
     
     
    YOU MAY BE AN ASPIE IF...
     
    ...you run an entire wash cycle before you remember you forgot to load it-- twice.  In a row.
     
    ...you really have used a paycheck for a book marker (like Einstein) and run into it by chance 3 months later when you remembered you were reading that book and decided to finish it.
     
    ...you check a pile of books out from the library, start them all at once, get halfway through, and renew them only because you really believe you're going to finish them, even though half of them are disappointing and the other half aren't addressing your questions after all, particularly if they are about physics or paranormal and astral phenomena.  Then you renew them again because you forgot to take them back.  Then you really do forget all about them and incur heavy fines.
     
    ...even with all this forgetting, you can remember in great detail several paintings you once saw in the waiting room of a doctor's office when you were six years old, among a number of other useless flashbacks that include the Herkimer the Homely Doll song on Captain Kangaroo (and wonder if the person singing it was Sterling Holloway), the smell of your lunch box in the first grade, and the heartbreaking disappointment of your first Valentine's day in the first grade.  AND the Johnny Appleseed song, and the kitchen table in the first house you lived in, and the time you got a needle stuck in your knee when you jumped on the couch when your mom got up from a sewing project to go do something, and...
     
    YOU MAY BE AN ASPIE IF...
     
    ...you wear the same clothes for 48 hours straight, to bed and back again.
     
    ...you forget you have makeup on and rub your eyes at work and discover it in the bathroom two hours later- *after* you've helped a dozen customers.  And it doesn't freak you out.  You just go, "Oh, yeah..."
     
    ...yet, in spite of this seeming lack of interest in your appearance, you obsess about the laundry.  Or your shoes being clean.  Or your eyebrows not exactly matching.
     
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    YOU MAY BE AN ASPIE IF...
     
    ...you wind up at the doctor's office a day early and are so convinced you've got the day right that they let you in anyway, even though the waiting room is packed and you're not sick.
     
    ...you convince a customer at the register that they still owe you $4.38 instead of the other way around, and all the cashiers around you stop what they're doing because even though they can hear the error of your ways, your argument is so convincing they can't help but watch in awe as the customer opens a change purse back up.  (This after acing all your college algebra tests in pen.)
     
    ...you don't recognize a monthly older couple checking into the hotel where you work even though you can see in the computer that you were the one who checked them in the last 6 times.
     
    ...you forget you took lunch already and try to punch back out an hour later for lunch.  (stressful day)
     
    ...you get lost in a Super Walmart.
     
    ...you have to leave the Super Walmart before you're done with your list because the noise and lights and people and overwhelming variety are causing enough anxiety to nearly pull your shirt off while you flap your long sleeves together reading labels.  (Seriously, Scott caught me nearly pulling my shirt off once as I flapped.  Egads, that would have been a treat for a few people, eh?  I don't wear long sleeves to town any more.)
     
    ...you're so spaced out leaving a Hallmark store that you run right into the door and stand there wondering why it won't open while you slowly focus back and realize there is a sign saying "Use Other Door" and someone behind you is falling over laughing.
     
    ...yet in spite of ALL of this confusion in public and with the public, you are able to alert an entire hotel full of guests to a tornado warning and supervise them into a hallway and keep them calm while a tornado passes by two miles away, and you help clear a large department store of customers while the fire department investigates smoke and fire alarms and you find out you're the ONLY employee that not only remembered to grab a flashlight and fire extinguisher but also followed all the steps properly.
     
    ...and you even arrive first on the scene of an accident and save someone's life because you remember in detail everything you've ever learned about airway clearance and taking control of someone in a panic.
     
    ...AND you even get a 4-story hospital locked down as a housekeeper at 4 a.m. reporting an extreme error of contagion that a nurse made earlier calling you stat to the ER.  (Aspies would make fabulous Star Fleet personnel.  We kinda dig protocol and things like OSHA, NEPA, and other technoweenie stuff.  Except we might wear our uniforms backward, or for several days in a row.  And wind up in the wrong conference room.)
     
    YOU MAY BE AN ASPIE IF...
     
    ...you find traffic so intimidating that you change lanes two miles ahead of time to be ready.
     
    ...you are terrified of merging on ramps.
     
    ...you have to map your route out in your head ahead of time like an inbuilt Tom-Tom, and having to change your route in the middle of it all means you have to reroute a new map in your head.
     
    ...you have the city memorized in a very two dimensional way, so you don't recognize where you are three dimensionally until you check the map in your head.
     
    ...you've been pulled over for going too slow in a school zone or on a highway.
     
    ...you've ever gotten into the wrong car at a store and wondered who left their sweater there or put the dangly thing on the mirror.
     
    YOU MAY BE AN ASPIE IF...
     
    ...you happen to know more about an obscure bit of trivia on a map or about another country than the college professor.
     
    ...you don't 'get' calculus, but the professor tells you that what you're trying to explain, describe, or ask about is two semesters down the road.
     
    ...you get a joke someone tells in another language that you don't speak, but a joke in English stumps you.
     
    ...you can't figure out your fellow classmates to save your life, but you ace your sociology major and anthropology minor.
     
    ...a particular word consumes half your day, and you walk around pronouncing it in various styles and inflexions, ignoring the stares.  pink, pink, PINK, pink, *pink*, pink
     
    ...a professor has to send a lower classman to find you, a grad student, on the first day of classes because you are lost, but when you walk into the room and the professor asks you to explain the scientific model to the class before you even find a seat, you jump on the chance to expound, much to the chagrin of the professor.
     
    ...you delight in arguing quantitative sociological analysis with a mathematics professor who doesn't agree with you that sociology is a science.
     
    ...finding flaws and holes in other people's reasoning is *fun*, no matter how unnecessary.
     
    ...a professor asks the students who they idolized growing up, and you say Mr. Spock.
     
    ...you got extra credit in a Logic class just for mentioning that you own a copy of Heidegger's "Being and Time".
     
    ...you'd rather watch the latest series on cosmology and physics on the History channel than anything else on tv.
     

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