Here are two stories.
On a field trip to the New York
Chinatown, a girl notices a restaurant which looks like it will have
proper 牛肉拉面 (beef lo
mein), something she has not been able to find for nearly a year and
which she has not yet been successful at making herself. She notes
the location of the restaurant on her mental map. Later in the day,
there is time for visiting a museum, gathering the information needed
to complete an assignment, and exploring Chinatown. After visiting
the museum, she sets off alone for the restaurant, since she already
has all the information she needs for the assignment. The restaurant
does have proper 牛肉拉面,
just as she hoped. Once she finishes and pays her bill, she wanders
Chinatown, briefly becoming lost after taking a wrong turn. She
returns to the meet-up location approximately ten minutes early with
a litchi ice cream in hand, finishes the ice cream, pulls out a book,
and begins to read until her classmates return.
You might think this girl to be a bit
weird, but as long as you know there wasn't a rule dictating a group
size, you're probably OK with this. She's just a bit of a loner.
On a field trip to the New York
Chinatown, an autistic girl notices a restaurant which looks like it
will have proper 牛肉拉面 (beef
lo mein), something she has not been able to find for nearly a year
and which she has not yet been successful at making herself. She
notes the location of the restaurant on her mental map. Later in the
day, there is time for visiting a museum, gathering the information
needed to complete an assignment, and exploring Chinatown. After
visiting the museum, she sets off alone for the restaurant, since she
already has all the information she needs for the assignment. The
restaurant does have proper 牛肉拉面,
just as she hoped. Once she finishes and pays her bill, she wanders
Chinatown, briefly becoming lost after taking a wrong turn. She
returns to the meet-up location approximately ten minutes early with
a litchi ice cream in hand, finishes the ice cream, pulls out a book,
and begins to read until her classmates return.
Slightly different reaction? Knowing
the girl to be autistic, the words alone, lost, and wander might
freak you out, and you might be wondering why she wasn't better
supervised. I mean, clearly the girl is a wanderer!
Here's the thing. The second story is
word-for-word the same as the first, except that ``a girl" is
replaced with ``an autistic girl" in the first sentence. One
detail, and everything changes. Also, this is a narration of a small
part of what I did yesterday, on a field trip to New York's Chinatown
with the Chinese Flagship Program. I did this to make a few points.
One: That's why I tend not to TELL
people I know off-line that I'm autistic. They might proceed to have
problems with my doing things like that or like spending a weekend
alone in Beijing. There is an unfortunate tendency to suddenly
presume incompetence as soon as you know someone is autistic, even if
you presumed competence before. Irrelevance to being able to do a math proof or an engineering problem means a lack of impetus, but if this presumption of incompetence weren't an issue, I'd probably eventually get around to it.
Two: The difference between a loner and
a wanderer is a diagnosis. As soon as you are autistic, leaving the
group and going places alone makes you a wanderer, even when there
wasn't an official rule saying you had to be with the group at the
time.
Three: If you call someone a wanderer
and go find them quickly before giving them a chance to show that
they are, in fact, competent to be traveling unsupervised, you may be
preventing perfectly competent, well, wandering. Because not all who wander are lost, and this applies to autistics too. (Also, not all who are lost lack the ability to get themselves un-lost.)
Oh, so true! Love love love the last sentence.
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