May24
 Once upon a time Romans forced gladiators to fight wild animals for the audience’s blood lust. Then we had Nazi Germany where regular Germans turned a blind eye to persecution or considered their own part in it minimal for they were only doing what ‘others had already done’. And we had football but it became so corporate people lost ownership of it. Today we have celebrity bashing as the new football and those who get the boots in will often say “I wasn’t the first”, “I’m only doing what others had already done” and that he or she ‘deserved it’ by ‘making themselves a public person’.  When haters call for new recruits, I find this lust for shared hatred sociologically fascinating but also calls to my spirituality as a Taoist. Why do people crave such imbalance? Read the rest of this entry »
May17
 I recently got a comment on one of my blogs. It was from a staunch supporter of a psychoanalytic approach to autism, an approach which held that autism was caused by trauma in the womb or due to a difficult birth (and could be treated through ‘rebirthing‘ and the debunked 1970s autism treatment of ‘holding therapy‘. This ‘primal pain’ theory includes the idea that the autistic child has become autistic from things as vast as chemical assaults by smoking and substance abusing mothers, by mothers experiencing mental illness or abuse or other trauma during pregnancy or who feel negativity or indifference about the child they are carrying or were effected by mother’s suffering post natal depression. He wanted to raise with me the idea that I was actually a “broken normal”. This is our conversation: Read the rest of this entry »
May15
 At the age of 25 I scored just under 70 on an IQ test. That’s in the mildly mentally retarded range. But by then I already spoke 4 languages, could scan volumes of books, play instruments, and could recite back long auditory strings outside of the ability of most humans.
I also already had an honors degree in Sociology, a degree in Linguistics. So how could I score so low? Read the rest of this entry »
May15
 Christophe Pillault produces some of the most moving art by people with autism in the world. Severely autistic, functionally non-verbal and with extremely limited self help skills he produces faceless, figurative works of soulful figures interacting. The works are full of movement, passion, yet also great grace Read the rest of this entry »
May14
If art expresses the cognition, perception, social emotional, communication and personality states of the artist, what are we learning from artists with autism? Are we learning about autism at all through their art, and if so, which facets of their autism? Are we in fact learning more about the diversity of autism through the array of works by people with autism and how does this stir up fiercely defended old and new stereotypes? Read the rest of this entry »
May14
 I’ve been an international public speaker since 1994. So I found it so amusing recently when someone posted that I earn $1000 a lecture plus a nice hotel. Wow, so I could potentially be earning $365,000 a year at that rate. Goodness, I could buy my own hotel!  So how true is the fantasy that as an autistic person working as a public speaker that I might live a decadent life of luxury? Read the rest of this entry »
May13
 Unemployment of adults on the autism spectrum is huge, thought to be at a rate of around 80-90% of people diagnosed as on the autism spectrum have no full time work. Read the rest of this entry »
May12
Lisa Niehoff works for Mainstream Living, Inc which provides services to the disabled in Iowa. She is editor of the company’s monthly newsletter, ‘The Insider’ which profiles disabled artists. She asked if I could write a profile piece for her magazine so instead I invited her to pose me some interview questions, and rather personal they were. Here’s our interview: Read the rest of this entry »
May12
It was 1996, a time when the rate of autism was still thought to be 1 in 10,000 people, high functioning people with autism were still thought to be rare and it was still believed that around 70% of people with autism were severely mentally retarded.  In that year my honors year that the Sociology lecturer mentioned in my first book, Nobody Nowhere, story writer, Dr Chris Eipper of La Trobe University, got involved with journalist, Kathy Gollan at ABC radio with a story. With no qualification in child development, psychology or psychiatry (nor any medical qualification whatsoever), he was going to deliver to her people who would dispute my formal diagnosis of autism by one of Australia’s leading autism specialists, Dr Lawrie Bartak. To back himself up, he would: Read the rest of this entry »
May12
Fiona Crosby is a second year English Literature student at Teesside University currently doing an assignment on The Representation of “disability”. She wanted to ask me questions in relation to the representation of “autistic presence†in contemporary cultural forms. This is our interview: Read the rest of this entry »