You're not wrong. You're not bad. You're different, and you're disabled,  but you are not broken or  wrong or less and you don't have to be indistinguishable from your peers. You can flap. You can  rock. You can write or type instead of speaking, even if you can (usually,  sometimes, with more effort than you ever dared admit) speak. You can  even admit to how much effort it takes, to how slow speaking really  is. And that's OK. Impairments are much less disabling when you accommodate  for them, and you can't accommodate for something you can't admit you  have. You can admit it. You can bring a pen and paper out with your  friends, just in case. You can bring an iPad out with your friends,  just in case. If they are really your friends, they will be fine with  it. Curious, perhaps, maybe confused, but they won't make a fuss. Because  you're just doing what you need to do in order to enjoy your time with  them. 
There may  be people who bully you, who make fun of you, who beat you up. They  might call you horrible things (or things they think are horrible but  really aren't if you think about it.) They might tell you it's because  of the ways you are different. They are either confused or lying. The bullies  who tell you that's why are probably lying. The adults who tell you  that it's your fault and that it would stop if you just stopped acting  so autistic are probably confused. That doesn't mean you need to be  confused. It also doesn't mean that you have to act less autistic. Or  that you can't act less autistic, if you think it is worth trying. It  might even work, if you can stick out less. (I was never able to- I could get rid of a lot of the more obvious things, but I always stuck out as somehow different.) It might even be worth it, as long as you recognize it for  what it is. (It's not you being weak, by the way. It's staying safe  in whatever way you can. It's also doing something that you shouldn't have to  do,  because the way you are is not wrong.) 
The bullying  isn't about the specific ways that you are different. It's about people  going after anyone who doesn't fit and trying to make them fit, and it's about power, and it's about people who want to  hurt others choosing victims they think they can blame for their own  victimization. It's about patterns in society that need to be changed,  but that doesn't mean you have to change them in elementary school or  middle school or high school. (No arguments if you think you can, but  you should know that the bullying will get worse before it gets better  if you do it that way, and your teachers might well join the bullies  rather than simply ignoring them if you try. I had teachers among my  bullies.)
No. The important  thing is that you know what it is really about. Biding your time until you have a chance  to make the changes you want by being the wonderful person you are reasonably  safely (never perfectly safe, but worth the risk) might  not look much different than hiding because you think they're right  and because you agree that you are broken, but it is different. It's  very different. 
This post has been added to the Down Wit Dat October 2014 Blog Hop.
This post has been added to the Down Wit Dat October 2014 Blog Hop.
Beautiful. Let them know there's a whole wonderful world of autistic people and allies who will welcome them.
ReplyDeletepeople with autism are very different but difference is a good thing I agree with you
ReplyDelete:) Difference is good. I think it would be pretty boring if everyone were the same. Or pretended to all be the same.
DeleteThe last comment was written by my eleven year old autistic daughter.
ReplyDeleteIt is a good comment. I like it. If your daughter ever wants to type to me more, she is welcome. I like kids, and she's close to my sister in age. (Fairly large age gap between me and my younger siblings)
DeleteVery well put! I like to compare disabilities to nearsightedness, which used to be extremely disabling, and is now totally "normal" (http://matir-asurim.blogspot.com/2013/09/what-is-disability.html). Reading this post I thought, "Yes, that would have been the experience of being bullied ostensibly for wearing glasses a generation or 2 ago.". I especially like your suggestion for people with speech impairment to just take their AAC along for social occasions. Like the girl who had to muster up the courage to wear her thick glasses on a date, it is actions like this which will bring true acceptance and inclusion down the road.
ReplyDelete