Trigger Warning: ABA, Abuse
Since I'm planning to write a letter to Jenny McCarthy as
well as to Playboy, I'm going to be reading the stuff she and her organization,
Generation Rescue, put out on the internet. Most of it is so bad that I CAN'T
leave it unanswered, so here comes answers.
The original article in this case is ``Let's Talk About …
Stimming." The title makes it sound like stimming is something to be
afraid of, but honestly? With the exception of a few actually dangerous stims,
like hitting ones head against the wall or slapping oneself in the face, stims
are only ``bad" if we decide they are. Maybe it's social expectations that
need to change, not our stims. Because really. I flap my hands for a bunch of
different reasons, and it hurts exactly no one.
His intro paragraph says that the treatment of these
behaviors (stimming behaviors) depends somewhat on the cause, which is true
enough if you WANT to treat it. Not a disease, but hey. Generation Rescue goes
for cures, and Jenny said there were no autistic adults, so I guess stimming
must be stopped. Using their (warped) logic, it makes sense.
He then goes to look for why the kid is stimming. (Since I'm
not a kid, I guess he wouldn't look for why I stim. But then, the leader of his
organization said I don't exist. Also, I know why I stim.) He points out all
kinds of discomfort, which is true enough, and I'm more than happy to see stims
that are to deal with discomfort stop because the discomfort stops (not if the
kid is just hiding it, though.)
He also suggests removing electronics that provoke stimming.
If it's that the electronics are causing discomfort, OK, but the ones he's
describing sound more like happy/excited stims to me, so I say leave it be.
Also, is he seriously talking about taking the iPad away from the autistic kid?
Does he have ANY idea how many non-speaking autistics use iPads to communicate.
Taking away someone's only method of communication is abuse, and it looks to me
like he'd do it if the iPad was also leading to stimming. Because, you know,
education can only truly begin when the kid is table-ready, aka not stimming.
Besides, if you take away the way he communicates that isn't speaking, maybe
he'll learn to talk. (It doesn't work that way.) So, as perhaps you can tell, I
think taking away the electronics is often going to be a horrible idea and/or
an abusive tactic. That iPad isn't just a toy, guys.
He eventually gets to stims that kids ``just prefer" to
do. I'm not sure how accurate ``just prefer" to do is- I can stop most of
my stims when I really want to, but it takes more effort than it does to stop
something I ``just prefer" to do, and the super excited hand flapping and
jumping isn't going anywhere even if I try. So I think he missed the ``that's
how they express happiness" stims that nothing needs to be done about
unless they are dangerous.
I was sad when I heard about the young man who said he
wanted to rock and stim to the lights at Disney but that he knew it would be
inappropriate. That young man has been successfully convinced that the way he
is is wrong, and that it is not appropriate to do anything besides hide the way
he is.
Finally, I know he says that children are more teachable
when they aren't stimming. I disagree. I remembered what I learned much BETTER when
I was allowed to fidget (stim) than when I had teachers who would confiscate my
fidget toys, up to and including taking my pen on one occasion. I still don't
sit still in class. You don't know that stimming means not paying attention,
since it frankly doesn't mean that. Have you TRIED teaching something while the
kid was flapping or rocking rather than trying to get the kid to stop first? It
just might work. Of course, you're going for cures... so you want all symptoms
gone, which means stimming has to go. That's why it's autism improving
dramatically in your final sentence, not the coping skills or the abilities of
the autistic kids improving dramatically, isn't it? You're trying to make them
act neurotypical so you can claim a cure.
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