I saw it at JFK International Airport while waiting for the first flight on the way to India. And I wanted to shout at it. I didn't shout at it then, but I sure am NOW! And... I was an adult by the time I was diagnosed, not a child.
(Image Description, image not avaliable)
At the left, there is a large, blown up picture of a girls
face. She looks asian- straight black hair, black eyes, round-ish face. She was
probably looking at the camera or very close to it. At the right, it says ``Every
20 minutes, a child is diagnosed with autism." At the bottom: ``Learn the
signs. autismspeaks.org."
Those ``every time X, Y happens" statements are usually
meant for fear-mongering, and this looks like no exception. I don't know about
you, but as soon as I saw the line about a child being diagnosed every twenty
minutes, I was pretty sure the poster would be for Autism Speaks. The
organizations I like wouldn't say something like that. They're usually more
along the lines of ``I'm a person, not a tragedy." But Autism Speaks seems
to want to portray us as tragedies. Can you think of any other reason that they
would make that sort of sign, go tell an autistic person who disagreed with
them to ``go play in traffic," or spend a huge part of their budget on
research for a cure many self-advocates don't want? I think they either see
being anything besides normal as a great tragedy or think the best way to get
money is to tell it like it's a tragedy. Since it's mostly parent-based
awareness that they do, I could believe that it started out as the former. But
today? With all the actual autistic people and people with autism (I don't want
to leave those of you who identify person-first out!) doing things like living
their lives, becoming self-advocates, and shouting about everything they think is wrong with Autism Speaks? At
this point, it's got to be the latter. And the latter is completely
unacceptable.
I've seen autism parents defined as those who would like
nothing more than to teach autistic children to speak and autistic adults to
shut up. I don't know about parents of autistics in general, but Autism Speaks
seems like that. They can get kids to say what they're told to say, and they
want to be able to claim some success at normalizing us, so the kids have to
learn to talk. But they don't want anyone who can think for his or herself
telling people what's wrong with their organization, so they want the autistic
adults to shut up. To this end, they talk nearly exclusively about autistic children,
not autistic people or autistic adults. People who don't
exist can't have anything to say. But...
But I exist. But others like me exist. And we have things to
say.
So we get dismissed as too high-functioning to understand
the problems that the low-functioning face, based purely on the fact that we
blog. That doesn't imply ability to walk, speak, cook, clean, or, well,
anything except type. Also, there is the (false)
high-functioning/low-functioning dichotomy. It's too arbitrary to truly help
anyone.
So we get dismissed as too autistic to understand the
problems our parents face or those other autistics face. But... it's called
AUTISM Speaks. Not parents of autistics, autism. Autism is an abstract
diagnosis used to describe autistics, not parents of autistics. So it shoulf be
us speaking, if the name is to be believed. The struggles our parents face
shouldn't be ignored, but our ability or lack thereof to understand those
struggles should make no difference to the validity of our voices when talking
about our own lives. It's not as if autism and parenthood are mutually
exclusive, anyways. Autistic parents of autistic children exist, as do autistic
parents of neurotypical children. And as for the struggles other autistics
face? Well, if we don't understand theirs, they don't understand ours, so they
should talk and so should we. But... we probably understand theirs better than
you do. We live with similar challenges. Not the exact same challenges, since
every person is different, and this applies to autistic people just as much as
it applies to neurotypical people, but similar ones. And that means we can't be
clueless.
So, how about listening to us? It doesn't mean ignoring our
parents, but it does mean that if I say ``X is not true for me," you don't
get to act as if it does on the basis that Autism Speaks says it should be
true. It also means accepting that we are individuals with hopes, dreams, and
aspirations of our own, not
self-narrating zoo exhibits or tragedies. It means not making posters
that spread fear about us, since few will listen to a group they fear. And
Autism Speaks fails on the not fear-mongering count.
No comments:
Post a Comment
I reserve the right to delete comments for personal attacks, derailing, dangerous comparisons, bigotry, and generally not wanting my blog to be a platform for certain things.