Callista wrote:
I'm not very fond of the puzzle symbol for autism. It seems to cast us as inscrutable puzzles--i.e., far away from everyone else, can't be understood, a problem to be solved... Autism itself as a problem to be solved, as an unknown rather than a relatively well-researched phenomenon... can't know what we're thinking, can't understand what we're saying, can't know what we're doing... worst of all, a person with pieces missing...
"I'm a person, not a puzzle!"
Agree. Don't know who said it first though.
All of the "puzzle" connotations seem to be of alienation and inscrutability. I don't like this. We are people, part of the world like any other human being. Neither autistic people nor autism itself is a "puzzle".
Prefer the rainbow infinity symbol, personally. It shows support for autistic people themselves. It is the difference between wanting to get rid of autism, or "solve the puzzle", and wanting to help autistics. Social model, disability advocacy versus medical "disease" model.
I tend to look at the puzzle ribbon in a different light, so to speak. I don't see us, the Autistic community, as being the puzzle so much as the world being the puzzle, and us on the spectrum being the odd pieces out, the ones that don't "fit".
Or, alternatively, I've wanted to make a bumper sticker/T-shirt that says, "I'm not a puzzle... YOU [NTs] are!"