We Are Like Your Child is a new, exciting blog collective of Autistic (capital A) bloggers, with the occasional allistic disabled poster.
It's for the stories that so often aren't shown in the media: those where we have difficulties and yet we problem solve creatively, we live with our disabilities rather than the whole "in spite of" and overcoming thing. Or the stopping and dripping in tragedy. This is a slice of reality from Autistic people.
It'll be a once weekly blog (or more. Maybe. But once weekly for sure) & I'm sure many people who read here would like to check it out. It's highly unlikely to be as firey as here--it's just a place where we can show things that won't make it into a "Success In Spite of Autism!" type anthology, nor are they the stuff of woe is me human interest stories, nor are they inspiration porn. It's just that yeah, we do have difficulties, yeah, we can work around some of them, and yeah, we're people even if we can't do some stuff.
So. Some of you might be interested in that. People who find here too political might too. Cuz we are like your child, and that's a good thing for all involved.
When the mob and the press and the whole world tell you to move, your job is to plant yourself like a tree beside the river of truth, and tell the whole world
"No, you move."
Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
Autistic Pride Day 2013
I am jet lagged, so this is going to be quite the ramble.
It's Autistic Pride Day, the day those of us who are culturally Autistic (and maybe those who aren't?) celebrate our neurologies. But what really does that mean? As people always ask me, what is there about autism to be proud of?
I'm proud to be part of the best community ever. We aren't a community with a lot of resources, but we're a creative, loving, generous group, on the whole. The community crowdsourced a friend of mine to Autreat! Most of them haven't even met her yet! (but they totally should). And we got medical care for the sick cat of one of our own. Generosity, we have it. It's moving, how much Autistic community does what we can for each other.
I'm proud of my community for standing up for what is right. There have been several flash blogs this year against hatred of Autistics & erasure of our accomplishments. Whenever one of our number is killed or brutalized, the Autistic community is there saying that isn't right, facing down truly triggering, hateful comments, not allowing evil to win. It's Autistics who have vigils to remember those killed for being autistic. This is a big undertaking, a sad undertaking, and yet we do it because it needs to be done. When a hospital was trying to deny care to an Autistic woman, it was our community that raised holy hell, tied up their phone lines for days, made a righteous stink. Because it is right. Because that is what we do.
The Autistic community I am proud of values each autistic person. My community knows that it's not apparent ability or disability that makes someone matter. My community knows that there is no such thing as "unable to communicate", though there is "not given a way to communicate easily". My community knows that each of us matters-not because of what we can or cannot do, but because we exist. Because we have a right to be here. Because different does not equal broken. Because worth is not measured in what you can do, but in being the best you you can be.
My Autistic community is a daily reminder that I am ok just as I am. It's a place, a family even, where my particular strengths, weaknesses, and inability to let injustice go are valued. They are the reason I survived a few times.
The Autistic community, my chosen family, is why I am proud to be Autistic. I love y'all, and wouldn't have you any other way.
It's Autistic Pride Day, the day those of us who are culturally Autistic (and maybe those who aren't?) celebrate our neurologies. But what really does that mean? As people always ask me, what is there about autism to be proud of?
I'm proud to be part of the best community ever. We aren't a community with a lot of resources, but we're a creative, loving, generous group, on the whole. The community crowdsourced a friend of mine to Autreat! Most of them haven't even met her yet! (but they totally should). And we got medical care for the sick cat of one of our own. Generosity, we have it. It's moving, how much Autistic community does what we can for each other.
I'm proud of my community for standing up for what is right. There have been several flash blogs this year against hatred of Autistics & erasure of our accomplishments. Whenever one of our number is killed or brutalized, the Autistic community is there saying that isn't right, facing down truly triggering, hateful comments, not allowing evil to win. It's Autistics who have vigils to remember those killed for being autistic. This is a big undertaking, a sad undertaking, and yet we do it because it needs to be done. When a hospital was trying to deny care to an Autistic woman, it was our community that raised holy hell, tied up their phone lines for days, made a righteous stink. Because it is right. Because that is what we do.
The Autistic community I am proud of values each autistic person. My community knows that it's not apparent ability or disability that makes someone matter. My community knows that there is no such thing as "unable to communicate", though there is "not given a way to communicate easily". My community knows that each of us matters-not because of what we can or cannot do, but because we exist. Because we have a right to be here. Because different does not equal broken. Because worth is not measured in what you can do, but in being the best you you can be.
My Autistic community is a daily reminder that I am ok just as I am. It's a place, a family even, where my particular strengths, weaknesses, and inability to let injustice go are valued. They are the reason I survived a few times.
The Autistic community, my chosen family, is why I am proud to be Autistic. I love y'all, and wouldn't have you any other way.
Wednesday, June 12, 2013
My wibbly wobbly rantings about the murder, yes murder, of Alex Spourdalakis.
I have been too torn up to write coherently about this. So I ranted at a webcam instead. Many thanks to Lynn for transcribing so I didn't have to.
Ohhh wow so that's an attractive face...I was mid sneer apparently (the still of the video is a washed out person who isn't that fair in real life with pink & purple hair and blue glasses making...a face. Eyes are narrowed, lip is quirked). I was very upset when I wrote this, and it was before I knew that Dorothy Spourdalakis was charged with first degree murder, and way before I knew that she'd been offered services and declined them. The sweariness would have been much more so.
Transcript starts here!
Ohhh wow so that's an attractive face...I was mid sneer apparently (the still of the video is a washed out person who isn't that fair in real life with pink & purple hair and blue glasses making...a face. Eyes are narrowed, lip is quirked). I was very upset when I wrote this, and it was before I knew that Dorothy Spourdalakis was charged with first degree murder, and way before I knew that she'd been offered services and declined them. The sweariness would have been much more so.
Transcript starts here!
This is my second attempt at this
since my first attempt was too profane and stuttery even for me.
Right now I am so angry and incoherent I cannot write. That’s a
problem. Usually I can write. I can’t always talk. Right now I am
so angry that ranting is pretty much what we’ve got.
Why am I angry? I am angry because a
young man named Alex Spourdalakis was killed yesterday. Yesterday is
when I found out about it anyway. You may know that name because Alex
was autism famous because he was in Loyola Hospital and he was being
restrained and his mom did not agree with the treatment plan. His mom
was really big into biomed, the AOA stuff, autism as a physical
illness …instead of…as a whole body illness rather than as a
neurological how you are. So, we’re going into this with some
problematical attitudes, right? So, his mom Dorothy apparently had a
custody battle with the hospital because of the disagreements in
treatment.
Yeah, ok, so the state made the
wrong call here. Alex was found with multiple stab wounds to his
chest…in his bed. Let me break that down for you in case you’re
not getting it…multiple stab wounds [making stabbing motions] in
his chest. There’s important things that live there, like your
heart and lungs, you know, things that are vital to life.
His mother and caregiver were found
somewhat unconscious next to his bed. I roll my eyes at this because
I know where they’re going with this. They’re going all Karen
McCarron on our asses. And I will explain that in a moment. But first
let me tell you how this is a big fucking failure.
People knew who Alex was. People
knew Alex was going through a lot of shit. People knew his mother
believed in all the biomedical and [lots of eye rolling] “I can get
my child back” bullshit. She had set up the narrative of him being
severely autistic, unable to communicate—which is not a
thing—violent, etc. And yeah, autistic people can be violent.
Neurotypical people can be violent. People who are neither can be
violent. However, your kid being bigger than you isn’t a reason to
kill them. Just throwing that out there. If you kill your child,
you’re a bad parent. Yes, I’m judging you. If you’ve even
thought about killing your child, you’re a bad parent. Yeah, I’m
being judgmental again. I’ll live with that. Love does not work
that way.
So one of the reasons I’m really
pissed off is because of the usual [eye rolling] “Oh, he’s in
heaven now”. My favorite is the thing that one of the groups that
was intended to work towards getting Alex out of the hospital was a
letter to Alex in heaven suggesting that he thank his mother for
stabbing him in the chest. [Sarcastic eye rolling] “Thank you so
much for brutalizing me, it’s my favorite”. Because now, you
see, he’s in heaven, which I don’t think exists. And he doesn’t
have autism. Ok, so even if there is a heaven, you’re going to go
there and you’re going to be the same person, otherwise you’re
not the same person who did whatever it is you do to get into heaven.
Autism is part of you. Ok, so that’s a whole other rant about how
theology mixed with woo woo crap is really fucking dangerous. I’ll
save that for another time. So, ok, we have the same old, same old.
[Eye rolling] Oh, she saved him from autism. Oh, she was so stressed.
If you’re so stressed out you’re going to kill somebody you need
help. Now, I’m not saying that in a “oh, don’t judge me” way,
I’m saying that as a matter of fact thing. If you think you’re
going to kill somebody, you need to talk to somebody about that. You
need to explore your options.
So, this lady, she killed her kid.
People are going around the internet saying, “Oh, I hope I never
get that desparate”. If you’re that desparate, go talk to
somebody, leave your kid with somebody that’s not you. Being that
desparate is not an option. It isn’t. I’ll take care of your kid
if you’re that desparate, and I live on SSI. And that’s from a
supposedly good parent that I heard that one.
Other stuff, this stuff is pissing
me off so I can’t make a coherent stream of thoughts. So, let’s
talk about that suicide attempt, ok? I said she was Karen McKarenning
it, because I’m cynical. Karen McCarron, you may recall, killed her
three year old daughter Katie killed her daughter Katie on Mother’s
Day and then took an overdose of Tylenol or aspirin that you don’t
die from. You get a breakfast of charcoal and three days in a psych
ward, unless you kill your autistic kid, in which case you get a
bunch of sympathy.
I don’t feel sorry for you,
Dorothy. I don’t believe your suicide attempt was all that sincere,
because you stabbed your son in his chest as he laid in his bed. If
you’re going to be violent with your victim, If you want to
convince me you have this murder suicide pact going on because you
can’t go on anymore, be consistent. If you’re going to poison
yourself, A) do some research, B) be consistent. If you’re going to
poison yourself, poison your kid. If you’re going to stab your kid,
grow some avocados and stab yourself too. The heart, it doesn’t
move. It’s in the same place on everybody unless you have some
freaky condition and it’s statistically unlikely that you do.
I don’t really believe that
suicide attempts when people have just killed their kid are all that
sincere. I don’t really think there’s a whole of regret going on.
I don’t because I’m a judgmental bitch. I can live with that. If
you stab your kid repeatedly you’re not sorry, if you go to the
effort to take your kid out of places so you can continue poisoning
them with altmed you’re not sorry. If you’re convincing people
that you’re saving your kid from autism you have no reason to be
sorry because you have an entire world view that says this is what
you do. If you can’t fix them, you kill them. That’s like this
whole tragedy martyr of autism thing is so common among biomed
parents I can’t even….You’re not a hero if you kill your kid.
You don’t deserve all that sympathy. You deserve everybody to be as
pissed off as I am.
But, you know, people aren’t
because all those people at Age of Autism and Autism Speaks have
people convinced that Alex was, you know, a burden. And people like
me, you know, maybe you should consider not existing, shit like that.
And that’s not ok, that’s really not ok. Alex deserved better.
His last few weeks, months even, were probably complete hell between
the hospital and the…well, ok, biomed says it’s ok to give your
kid a bleach enema. I don’t know if that’s what was going on. I’m
pretty convinced that chelation which can destroy your kidneys was
part of what’s going on. Alex’s symptoms from the hospital sound
remarkably like what happens if you do dangerous altmed or if
somebody is poisoning you.
I don’t have no idea what was
actually going on. Loyola hasn’t given a statement and HIPAA says
they can’t tell us what was going on, but I do know that all the
gastrointestinal crap that was going on with Alex could have been
induced intentionally or not intentionally via application of many of
the therapies that DAN doctors or whatever they’re calling
themselves now promote. So, this is a tragedy, and this is a tragedy
that we could have seen coming. People probably did see it coming a
little bit. Because she showed all the signs in terms of belief
system. Most of the parents who kill their kids seem to be able to
convince people that autism was a burden and it was making
everybody’s lives hell and they were saving their kids from autism.
Or it was a mercy, or whatever.
Again, if you kill your kid, you’re
a bad parent. A bad parent. If you want to yell at me for saying
that, that’s cool, just leave your knife at home. So this is
something everybody should have seen coming. The hospital should have
known better, assuming the hospital thinks that autistic people are
people. So, yeah, I’m angry, and I’m upset, and I just stopped
crying before I started filming the failed one of these. And we need
to do better. Not just autistic people but everybody who purports to
care about autistic people needs to do better. And that biomed shit
needs to be smacked down. I really do blame that mindset for a lot of
the deaths. Society needs to stop saying “Oh, the poor dear, think
about her, her child was so impaired. No wonder she killed him. Think
about her, take a walk in her shoes”. I acknowledge that I have
shoes. These are the ones I was wearing today [holding up shoes],
would you like go go for a walk? No, you just want me to walk in a
whiny martyr mom’s shoes? Well, that’s not going to happen. Not
until acknowledge that my shoes exist. So, yeah, my thoughts are all
over the place, and I’m probably going to go cry again because this
is terrible and it shouldn’t have happened. And I’m actually
angry enough that if someone tells me not to judge to my face it’s
going to be loud or it’s going to be tearful, or I don’t even
know. Again, if you kill your child, you don’t love them, and
you’re a bad parent. That means Dorothy was a bad parent, Karen
McCarron was a bad parent. All these folks on this poster are bad
parents. And if you think being that desperate is an option, you
might be a bad parent. This has been your Tuesday afternoon of judgey
bitchiness. Just don’t kill your kids.
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Thank you update, with pictures. And Where we're going from here.
Again, thank you everyone who helped with the fundraising to get Mandy to Autreat. She is super excited. It's going to be quite an adventure-Mandy, me, & service cat Purkinje.
The adventuring party:
We have purchased plane tickets, the necessary motel room for when one flies to an event on the east coast from the west coast, and set up getting from there to Autreat (YAY).
And now. This was amazing. So where do we go from here?
If you are my facebook friend you know: I am setting up an Etsy to sell crafty goodness, all the proceeds of which will go into an Autreat travel fund to get people there. Making the things for the donors was fun, and Mandy knits, and a friend of mine makes pop culture counted cross-stitches, and there's a huge pool of talent. And people buy crafty stuff year round. And we can make things that are relevant to more than just our community, which is important I think to get the momentum going.
I'm excited. Overwhelmed with half formed ideas & the amount of purple beads I have, but excited.
Some things I made this year:
Things I will make throughout the year? Similar, and medicalert bands, and left/right bracelets, and whatever else I can make. I want more friends at Autreat next year.
The adventuring party:
We have purchased plane tickets, the necessary motel room for when one flies to an event on the east coast from the west coast, and set up getting from there to Autreat (YAY).
And now. This was amazing. So where do we go from here?
If you are my facebook friend you know: I am setting up an Etsy to sell crafty goodness, all the proceeds of which will go into an Autreat travel fund to get people there. Making the things for the donors was fun, and Mandy knits, and a friend of mine makes pop culture counted cross-stitches, and there's a huge pool of talent. And people buy crafty stuff year round. And we can make things that are relevant to more than just our community, which is important I think to get the momentum going.
I'm excited. Overwhelmed with half formed ideas & the amount of purple beads I have, but excited.
Some things I made this year:
Things I will make throughout the year? Similar, and medicalert bands, and left/right bracelets, and whatever else I can make. I want more friends at Autreat next year.