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The World Needs Autism
By William Stillman
Condensed from
the new book
The Soul of Autism: Looking Beyond Labels
to Unveil Spiritual Secrets of the Heart Savants,
published by New Page Books © 2008, William Stillman)
The world needs autism. Of
this, I am convinced. The world needs autism now more than ever.
Don’t believe me? Look around...look closely and carefully.
Contemplate a global awareness. Consider the call to action
we’ve received in recent times by way of grand-scale,
devastating natural disasters and international terrorist
attacks—which drastically spiked an online “rapture” index, a
Christian speedometer that measures how quickly the world is
careening toward the day of reckoning. Popular culture has
relaxed ethical conduct so much so that films and television
programming have desensitized us to sex, violence, and abusive
language to the point of no further room in which to push the
proverbial envelope. Motion pictures like Saw and its
sequels, Wolfcreek, The Devil’s Rejects,
Turistas, and Hostel have given rise to a
pornographic franchise: human beings mutilating other human
beings with sadistic ardor in gratuitous, graphic depictions of
torture. Witness, too, the celebrity behavior we have come to
condone as acceptable due to “wardrobe malfunctions,” racial
rants and sordid misconduct. Although this book was written
during wartime, it is the irresponsible misbehavior of certain
public figures that made top news. There is vague accountability
and fewer repercussions in consequence for one’s misdeeds which
may, in fact, be rewarded post “rehab.” Further, the premise of
most reality television is predicated upon lust, greed,
manipulation, deceit, and the endeavor for physical beauty at
all costs. Such cultural poison has anesthetized us to our own
humanity.
Think people don’t emulate what they see? A recent Associated
Press article speculates there’s an astounding drop in social
etiquette—rudeness and amorality is on the rise. Corporate
corruption has fostered employee disloyalty. Email has taken
passive-aggressive interactions to new heights. The 2006
National Violent Crime Summit concluded that “crime is coming
back” in a big way. USA Today recently cited an FBI estimate for
a 94 percent increase in hate crime attacks against persons with
developmental disabilities. Reports of “road rage” are a daily
occurrence. “Happy Slapping” has become the latest craze:
someone physically accosts an unsuspecting victim while another
perpetrator records the assault with a camera-phone, and posts
the attack online for all to see. Internet child sex predators
are rampant, and child pornography has become more brutal with
the number of images depicting violent abuse rising fourfold
since 2003. Americans are insulated with artificial complacency
from heinous international human-rights violations perpetrated
by megalomaniac dictators. Instead, self-absorbed and selfish
behavior without consideration of others has become the norm, it
would seem. A “messiah complex” has emerged; we have become a
narcissistic society bent on gratifying our own needs because
“it’s all about me.” Violators of this pursuit are perceived as
rivals. And it’s autistics that, clinically, are defined, in
part, as lacking empathy and social reciprocity!
In early 2007, the Centers for Disease Control revised its
autism statistics from the previous tally of 1 in every 166
children (which excludes countless untabulated adults), now
suggesting that the national figures are closer to 1 in every
150. But perhaps the reverse statistic signifies the greater
epidemic: of every 150 individuals, 149 are “normal” or neuro-typical!
We so dearly need people with autism and other differences—in
their mild, unaffected manner—to lend balance to the world, and
refocus us on what’s truly important. Perhaps this principle
resonates most with parents who have been obliged to undergo a
personal transformation as a result of their child’s
diagnosis—parents who otherwise may have succumbed to the
messiah complex. One mother confessed, “I think [autism] has
humbled me. I think I’m a pretty good parent, and I can do that
sort of stuff well; but with autism, that ego is taken down a
few pegs. I think it has helped me be more accepting of people
with disabilities. Not that I was a complete anti-handicapped
person before, but now I think more in terms of what people can
do.”
Dwindling are the days of parental shame and self-deprecating
guilt, as underscored by the mother who wrote, “Autism for me
was a challenge not a defeat.” A new evolution is compelling
parents to re-envision their lives, to see clearly their own
transcendence, and to hold greater hope for the future. This is
supported by research such as the “Qualitative Investigation of
Changes in the Belief Systems of Families of Children with
Autism or Down Syndrome,” a document that concludes, “Although
parents may grapple with lost dreams, over time positive
adaptations can occur in the form of changed world views
concerning life and disability, and an appreciation of the
positive contributions made by children to family members and
society as a whole. Parents’ experiences indicate the importance
of hope and of seeing possibilities that lie ahead.”
One parent rejoiced and opened her heart by telling her circle
of parent-friends, “I was just thinking about all the reasons I
am ticked that my child is autistic and then thought, you know,
if autism had not happened to our family I would not have
learned so many things! So many people I would have never known!
I believe it has taught me courage beyond words…As much as I
hate it, it has made me a better person and better parent to my
child. Anyone here feel as though you were helped on some level
by this diagnosis?” She received an avalanche of glowing
responses.
I have yet to meet a person with autism who has not in some
capacity declared their desire to give back of themselves, to
share their gifts, and to teach others. In their gentle way—as
befits their nature—people with autism compel us to higher
standards of deference and respect for humanity. Being present
with the autistic individual requires us to be calm and refrain,
to be silent and truly listen. What do you suppose people
with autism have indicated they’re here to teach? The most
salient themes of the human experience: tolerance, patience,
sensitivity, compassion, and, of course, unconditional love.
These themes consistently emerge in my work as a consultant no
matter where I go.
We need people with autism in the numbers with which they’ve
increased, especially if we’re to unite in a renaissance for
what is right and true and good and kind. It is coming. And the
next major human rights movement to shatter myths and tear down
walls of hate will be lead by those meek of voice but strong of
will.
© 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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