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Everyone Has Autism
By William Stillman
Ever awaken in the middle of
the night and realize your arm is “asleep” from the elbow down?
It is a common situation experienced by nearly everyone at one
time or another. As much as your brain is willing that arm to
budge, it is deadened to the signals or impulses your brain is
sending it. How many of you have actually had to physically move
the asleep arm with your other hand in order to free up
circulation and regain its use? If that same nightime paralysis
were in more than one limb, or lodged in your voicebox, you
would outwardly behave in ways that were autistic, just like any
of autism’s “cousins” such as Asperger’s Syndrome, dyslexia,
Tourette’s, Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, Cerebral Palsy, Lou
Gehrig’s, ADD, ADHD, OCD, Sensory Integration Disorder, and a
realm of other human experiences on a neurological continuum.
I’ve heard people refer to autistic children as “mutants” or
functioning on par with a dog! This is hard to fathom when we
consider that we are all more alike than we are different, and
we all are truly brothers of one another. It is this kind of
fear that the multi-billion dollar autism industry is founded
upon—hastily, intensively, erasing all traces of autism in favor
of normalcy. But in my work as an autism consultant, 90 percent
of what I endeavor has absolutely nothing to do with the
autistic one; it has everything to do with creating a
transformation in everyone around that individual!
Noteworthy about those who
would suggest that anything less than their perception of normal
is unworthy, is that they fail to recognize a truth: at the
present rate of autism statistics (one in 150 children and
counting), it is they who will soon be the minority if they’re
not first rendered “disabled” by virtue of genetics,
deteriorating health, poor lifestyle choices and the aging
process. They would surely wish for others to continue presuming
their intellect regardless of the physical transformation their
bodies will endure (which may cause them outwardly to present in
an autistic-like manner).
The curious thing is we all
have autism to one degree or another! We’ve all experienced
neurological crossed-wires that result in motor-control blips,
misfires and disconnects. You experienced an “autism” if you’ve:
- driven from Point A to Point
B, but upon arriving at Point B you have no recollection of the
drive.
- begun driving from Point A with Point B as your final
destination, but today you need to make a special stop to pick
up something or someone—and you end up driving your regular
route, having forgotten to make the detour.
- been driving along, and hear a song you like with the
intention of listening all the way through, but soon realize
your mind has wandered and you haven’t heard a word of it.
- been driving along and hear a song you haven’t heard since
high school—and experiencing the song immediately conjures
memories of that era in your life. We create a strong
associative connection in the same way with scents and smells we
link in memory to certain people and places (a food aroma,
cologne or perfume, or tobacco), as well as life-defining events
such as an accident, a birth or death, or a disaster of some
sort (you could probably relate details about where you were and
what you were doing on September 11, 2001).
- happened upon someone familiar while out shopping, but seeing
them out of the context in which you know them disables you from
recollecting their name on the spot and in the moment (although
it may come to you after you’ve had sufficient process time).
- had to physically retrace your steps in order to remember
something, or you’ve misplaced something you suddenly realize
you’ve been holding the whole time you’ve been searching for it
(a pair of scissors or your eyeglasses).
- lost track of time or self-awareness (no need to eat or use
the bathroom) while immersed in an activity for which you hold
great passion (painting, jogging, dancing, gardening, etc.).
- had a case of the giggles so severe that you could not regain
your composure until the experience ran its course.
- ever been so angry, or afraid, and words escaped you in the
moment.
- absolutely had to scratch an itch and could not focus on
anything else until you were so relieved.
- calmed your anxiety by biting your nails, tapping a pen,
shaking your leg, rocking yourself, twirling strands of your
hair or toying with a piece of jewelry, or talking or humming to
yourself.
- experienced uncontrollable shivers so intensely that your
teeth chattered involuntarily.
- struggled to decipher the meaning of certain words in the
appropriate context, such as “she shed a tear over the tear in
her new dress.”
- organized your items in your kitchen cupboards, bathroom, work
space, or clothes closet in alphabetical order (canned good with
labels facing out), by color-coordination, or at right angles.
- come in from frigid weather and your hands are so numb with
cold, you could not use them to hold an eating utensil, write
longhand, or unbutton your coat.
- had a song in your head that absolutely will not go
away! It
may be The Star-Spangled Banner, a commercial jingle, or a Barry Manilow tune. You may have even been awakened in the middle of
the night hearing the song you cannot seem to banish. Imagine if
that experience of being “stuck” with the song in your head
(which precludes your thought processes) transferred throughout
your body, or stuck in your throat and hindered your
vocalizations?
These common experiences—“brain fades” or instances in which our
body vetoes brain signals—affect us all, making us kindred in
our humanity. But if you did them with any degree of regularity,
you’d be eligible for an autism diagnosis! The next time someone
suggests an autistic person’s hand-flapping or finger-flickering
is maladaptive, gently remind them that they do it too, only it
looks like the times they sit and shake a leg!
As much as we are all on a
learning curve about autism (including some “experts” in the
medical community), we are also all on a curve of diversity in
our collective human experience. This begs the question: is
there really any such thing as “normal?” Just maybe autism isn’t
really as autistic as it seems.
© 2008, William Stillman
William Stillman is speaker, consultant, self-advocate and
author of numerous autism and special needs parenting books. His
Website is www.williamstillman.com.
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