January10
I know of adults and teens with autism who have spoken or written about losing awareness of parts of their body… they’ve felt they are floating without awareness of volitionally using their legs, or felt they are just a head and the body is working ‘without them’. I wanted to know about other people’s experiences so I put it to those on my Facebook Page:
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January8
I am diagnosed with both autism and a dissociative disorder called DID (Dissociative Identity Disorder). I have met others with both diagnosed conditions so the two can certainly co-exist. Read the rest of this entry »
December27
To answer this we really need to ask several questions. Read the rest of this entry »
December24
Merry Jesus, Happy Santa, all insane things to those happy to indulge them, happy puppy clips with gift wrapped Santa bones, merry Christmas lights to you all with baubles, blissful ignorance, glorious kitsch, may it rain wrapping paper and bubble wrap, rejoice in E-cards and ensure no cat will go without tinsel-topped gourmet cat food, indulge your milk and cookies, roll in your aerosol snow. I’ll send your regards to Oxfam.
Madly and warmly,
Donna et al.
Donna Williams, BA Hons, Dip Ed.
Author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter.
Autism consultant and public speaker.
http://www.myspace.com/nobodynowherethefilm
http://www.donnawilliams.net
http://www.aspinauts.com
November20
Too funny to not share. Click here for the clip.
November20
Interestingly, the majority of those with Asperger’s Syndrome have Alexithymia, an inability to read their own emotional states or even know if they are having any.
My Core Self though well dented and fragmented had taken a backseat in the body around age 2-4. As an adult it is finally able to begin to present in and through the body. But my question is whether Alexithymia could be the product of living as a split off self which became like a satellite, doing social interface on behalf of the Core Self and that once the Core Self was ‘replaced’ by this ‘meta self’, the meta self went on to experience itself as Alexithymic? Read the rest of this entry »
November15
Being diagnosed with autism and with Dissociative Identity Disorder I reflected on the hundreds of children and adults I’ve worked with as an autism consultant since 1996. Given dissociation is such a natural process in young children that DID cannot reliably be diagnosed in early childhood, was dissociation something only non-autistic children did? If autistic children also farted, yawned, ate, toileted, slept, breathed, did they also have this natural ability to dissociate? Could their autism be complicated by issues of dissociation, depersonalisation, derealisation? And what might these look like in someone with autism? Read the rest of this entry »
November4
My husband, Chris Samuel, is a wonderful photographer and has a new photography exhibition. It’s mostly new works and is on at the friendly, funky Have Ya Bean Cafe at 5 Main St in Upwey throughout November. They have cappuccinos there people travel for, good cakes, great food, and can cater for special diets. Get along there, see the exhibition and enjoy the atmosphere.
October27
FRIEND
In memory of Anne McDonald
the eyes in which I saw your mood
the corners of your mouth which spoke one or the other
the laughter grin without the laugh
the repertoire of noises and their musicality
you were in there somewhere between letter boards and i-pads
somewhere between the table banter and my tics
between ice-cream and pills
somewhere between pears, Kahlua and chocolates.
we met
a synchronicity
an understanding,
energy vibrations
a sameness
reaching out
across a dinner table
Donna Williams Read the rest of this entry »