April7
 As governments worldwide put economy before climate let me quote from , New Scientist cover story, from 28th Feb 09 issue from article “Surviving in a Warmer World” by Gaia Vince, who on page 33 quotes Crutzen in conclusion:
“I would like to be optimistic that we’ll survive, but I’ve got no good reason to be. I order to be safe we would have to reduce our carbon emissions by 70 per cent by 2015. We are currently putting in 3 percent more each year”.
Want to help change that? Lets stop over glorifying the replication process we call populating, get over ourselves, give the planet a rest and speak out to make the changes needed for us to be a planet that can still feed ourselves in 2015.
Donna Williams, Dip Ed, BA Hons
author, artist, singer-songwriter, screenwriter
http://www.donnawilliams.net
March30
A student named Kim Fairley had read several of my books and ws writing a paper on The Development of Autism. She asked if she could ask some questions. I agreed on the basis I’d publish it as an interview for the benefit of others. Here’s the interview: Read the rest of this entry »
March29
 Barrie Silberberg is author of: The Autism and ADHD Diet: A Step-by-Step Guide to Hope and Healing by Living Gluten Free and Casein Free (GFCF) and Other Interventions, to be published by Sourcebooks, Inc. April 2009. Having been one of the earliest diagnosed people with autism on a GF/CF and low Salicylate/low Phenol diet (I went on this in 1990) I invited her to send me some questions about my experiences with the diet. Here’s our interview: Read the rest of this entry »
March21
  With his very first art show coming up this April 16th (opening is 1-3 Saturday April 18th 09 so hope to see you there!) I interviewed my lovely, shy techie husband, Chris, on his upcoming exhibition, “Wonderment”, at Jarmbi Gallery at Burrinja Cultural Centre in Upwey, Victoria, Australia. I asked him how his own Wonderment manifests and how he, as a techie, discovered he was also an artist. Here’s the audio interview.
Enjoy,
Warmly,
Donna Williams *)
http://www.donnawilliams.net
March18
I was a kid who’d fall out of a tree and never cry. Winded, bruised, I’d get up and try and keep going, puzzled that I was winded or that a bruised limb wouldn’t move well. Emotionally, I had ’emotional fits’ several times a day when it was like a laundry basket of unprocessed, undifferentiated emotions would suddenly come to the surface, feeling I was eaten up by tidal waves. I had no words for these and couldn’t tell what moods were in there, what situations they’d come from, so I’d just rage at myself, biting, hitting, pulling my hair or race around in circles like a tortured animal. Read the rest of this entry »
March18
At 4.31pm I was sitting at my desk just like I was 2 weeks ago. Then the whole house rumbled, the foundations, the walls, the very earth. By the time I realised Melbourne had yet another earthquake, a 4.6 this time (last time was a 4.7), it had stopped. I strode outside and called to my neighbour. Did we just have another earthquake? She wanted to know. Yep, I said, shocked. Wild stuff. Melbourne and earthquakes were always such unlikely dance partners.
Donna Williams
http://www.donnawilliams.net
http://www.myspace.com/donnaandtheaspinauts
March18
 I was reflecting on what it takes for me to be friends. I’m friendly to all and friends with far fewer.
Sometimes someone will ask what it takes for me to want to be friends especially because I’m very solitary and autonomous.
So, for what its worth, here’s my basics: Read the rest of this entry »
March14
 I do not support thrusting health treatments onto any person without health conditions though I support the right of those with health disorders to treatment. Health treatments of a person with autism should be based on relieving their health issues – gut, immune, metabolic disorders and perhaps the neurological and psychiatric fallout of these disorders.  Trying to alter an autistic personality through health treatments is ridiculous but one can have an autistic personality with or without serious health disorders and their associated challenges. Read the rest of this entry »
March11
 So many websites have ‘captchas‘ now… those combos of jumbled letters and numbers. What of the dyslexics who tumble them both? 3 and E, come on guys, they look the same. A and 4 and 7. Where’s the difference? 2 and 5 and s? 8 and B? d and 6 and 9 and b and p and q? W and M? Z and N? I and 1? F and H? O and 0? u and n? Anyone else have this alphanumerical soup? When I was 9 I was struggling with lots of these and got through that enough to read even though visual verbal agnosia means I still read without meaning unless I use gestural signing and I still use my BPI tinted lenses for Scotopic Sensitivity so the print doesn’t swim about on the page. But these ‘captures’, I’m sure I take 3 times longer to get one right than most people. Ah, they don’t design the world for funky brains like mine.
Donna Williams *)
http://www.donnawilliams.net
http://www.myspace.com/donnaandtheaspinautsÂ
March11
A reader from Aspergers Parallel Planet, Alyson Bradley, sent me interview questions about the fourth book in my autobiographical series, Everyday Heaven (published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers). A brave woman indeed for she is diagnosed with Asperger’s, is Dyslexic with learning difficulties and cognitive challenges and not a big reader. Her questions are interesting. Here’s our interview. Read the rest of this entry »