Magazine article about Temple Grandin

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Woodpeace
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03 Apr 2011, 9:27 am

It is in this week's issue of Radio Times, the British television and radio features and listings magazine. It is in connection with the film of her life which will be shown on Sky Atlantic at 9pm today, 3rd April. The two-page article is explanatory background to an interview with Grandin. It is headed "Girl with an exploding mind". Here are extracts from the article.

Quote:
In an era where Katie Price can publish three autobiographies by the time she's 32, filming a life story can seem a little repetitive. First success - check. Sudden tragedy - check. Amazing rebirth - check. Not Temple Grandin, however. You want a life less ordinary? Grandin, now a professor of animal science at Colorado State University, was born with autism, savbed from an institution by the dedication of her mother, mute until the age of four, saved by cattle, now a professor of animal science, best-selling author and architect of half the world's abattoirs. They don't write novels like that because no one would believe them.
[...]
Born into a wealthy Boston family in 1947, as a child Grandin avoided eye contact, rocked back and forth and screamed if anyone tried to hug her. She refused to talk until she was four and, after a hearing test established she wasn't deaf, doctors diagnosed severe brain damage and suggested a nice hospital where she could pass the rest of her days...

Today, of course, we'd recognise the signs of autism. Back then it was only her mother Eustacia who believed Grandin could be helped. When Grandin met RT [Radio Times], it's clear her mother was right. We settle down over a cup of tea in a sunlit room and the press officer introduces us to a smiling woman dressed a little like a cowboy. Unlike other celebrity interviews, however, the press officer then whispers a quick, last minute warning: "Remember - don't touch her."
[...]
Her mother's dogged refusal to put her into an institution and insistence on speech therapy, attention and education helped her step cautiously through our world. Grandin explains that her mind is like Google Images: you put in a word, say "love", and she tumbles through a cavalcade of visual impressions from Herbie the Lovebug to her mother to a scene from a movie and on and on at paralysing speed. It's no wonder it took her a while to talk.

The film depicts these visual explosions in a way even Grandin says is accurate, cutting short, scratchy movies in with cartoons and photos in chaotic succession. You can feel Grandin's panic as the sensations overwhelm her - like falling into the finale of a Tom and Jerry cartoon. Anyone's reaction would be to curl up and hope it all goes away.

Her family and the therapist spent hours playing games to help her with this, taking time to teach Grandin how to say "please" and "thank you", sit up straight and speak politely. "I had table manners drilled into me as a child, I couldn't comment on fat ladies in the supermarket. When I look back, that was a good thing. I'm seeing way too many Asperger kids who are total slobs. There is just no excuse for that."

It helped a little but school kids still taunted her, calling her "tape recorder", because she'd lock on to a sentence and repeat it over and over. She explains this by comparing her head to the internet again. "Imagine switching the internet on with nothing in it - it won't have anything to say," she explains. "The more experiences you put into it, the more it's going to have and the more I can say. As a kid I had very few things I could draw on. I would repeat anything I could."

It was one long, hot summer on her aunt's ranch in Arizona, tending cattle, that created her breakthrough. Her mother sent her to the farm when she was 15 - even then she was an accomplished inventor and horse rider because "the only place I could go where there was no teasing was horseback riding, the electronics lab, places like that." She noticed that when cattle on her aunt's farm went crazy, they were put into squeeze chutes - a kind of wooden hugging device - to settle them. "So I built a plywood device that was similar because I had these horrible, horrible anxiety attacks and I found I could get into this and it would calm me down."
[...]
"One of the things that bothered me when I was young was my sound sensitivity," she says. "Loud noises were like a dentist's drill hitting a nerve. There are other people on the spectrum who can't stand fluorescent lights. Hollering wouldn't calm me down and it wasn't calming the cows down."

And here's the unscriptable twist. All that she learned from those cows and the machine that helped her so profoundly led her to one conclusion - that she must dedicate her life to building the best slaughterhouse the world has ever known.

If it was a Hollywood movie, it would go the other way - she'd set out to free them or found a vegetarian society. Instead, as a doctor of animal science, she's the architect of over half North America's abbatoirs. She explains that she doesn't want to save the animals' lives - she wants to make their last minutes on earth more pleasant.
[...]
If this sounds like a mission, it is - but not in the usual way. Regarding me with the same besument as she regards all those without autism (she once described being autistic as being like "an anthropologist on Mars") she explains why it's her who has to get the job done.

"You certainly don't want go get rid of all autism traits because if you did, all you'd have is a bunch of social yakkity yaks sitting round the campfire and nothing would get done. Take the cavemen. Who figured out how to make the first stone spear. It wasn't the yakkity yaks, that's for sure. It was some Asperger sitting in the back of a cave figuring how to chip rocks into spearheads. Without some autistic traits you wouldn't even have a recording device to record this conversation on."

Once she'd built her perfect slaughterhouse she had to take on the cowboys who ran them, facing them down when they called her names. She also stood up to speak at autism conferences - amazing the doctors who believed autism sufferers were locked in for life. Now she's advising governments on their lifestock, has received awards from both McDonalds and Peta and - in 1986 - wrote Emergence: Labelled Autistic, the first autobiography from an autistic author. The film ends on her triumph - ready to become Temple Grandin as she is today; confident, chatty and, at the end of the interview, offering me her hand to shake.

Right now, for instance, she's against the idea of weeding out autism genes should they be discovered. She accepts that autism is who she is, just as she accepts the inevitable fate of her beloved cows. "In nature everything dies. Those cattle would never have been born if we hadn't bred the cows and bulls together. While they're alive we've got to give them a good life. I feel very, very strongly about that."



jmnixon95
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03 Apr 2011, 9:43 am

Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?



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03 Apr 2011, 9:49 am

No.


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03 Apr 2011, 11:49 am

Thanks for posting this Woodpeace, I love Temple.



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03 Apr 2011, 12:20 pm

jmnixon95 wrote:
Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?


No.



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03 Apr 2011, 1:02 pm

jmnixon95 wrote:
Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?


Why? :?



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03 Apr 2011, 1:22 pm

Freak-Z wrote:
jmnixon95 wrote:
Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?


Why? :?


What do you mean by this?

(Anyways, glad to see I'm not.)



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03 Apr 2011, 1:25 pm

jmnixon95 wrote:
Freak-Z wrote:
jmnixon95 wrote:
Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?


Why? :?


What do you mean by this?

(Anyways, glad to see I'm not.)


I thought it was an easy question. Why are you semi-annoyed by her?



Last edited by Freak-Z on 03 Apr 2011, 1:35 pm, edited 1 time in total.

jmnixon95
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03 Apr 2011, 1:30 pm

Freak-Z wrote:
jmnixon95 wrote:
Freak-Z wrote:
jmnixon95 wrote:
Am I the only one semi-annoyed by her?


Why? :?


What do you mean by this?

(Anyways, glad to see I'm not.)


I thought it was an easy question. Why are semi-annoyed by her?


That word is reputable for being ambiguous in my book, especially online.

She's annoying mainly because she says she has "Asperger's." I think I may have already said this about her before, but if anyone knows anything about her early development, she claims to have had "severe autism." You don't go from "severe autism" to "Asperger's", anyone with even a basic understanding of the Autism Spectrum would know that. And she calls it "Asperger"... that irks me for some reason. You don't have Hans Asperger, do you?

She has done a good amount for the autism community, sure, but some people treat her like a god or something. My ASD Resource teacher (don't go there anymore because I never needed Special Ed in the first place) called her the "spokesperson for Autism." Ha! How could one say such a thing?



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03 Apr 2011, 3:04 pm

I view Temple Grandin as an idol, but not a god. I don't worship her because she is an expert or whatever, I admire her because she used her "deficit" and turned it into something that helped her.

I understand why "going from 'severe autism' to 'Asperger's'" would annoy someone. She says that a lot of people with Asperger's are slobs and there's no excuse, that somewhat annoys me. I have HFA and I don't care that much about how I look.


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03 Apr 2011, 7:11 pm

She annoys me a little too. I disagree with about 80% of her beliefs so you can see why.


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03 Apr 2011, 7:31 pm

Temple Grandin was handed a lemon from which she main lemonade. Good for her!

ruvyen



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03 Apr 2011, 7:35 pm

jmnixon95 wrote:
She's annoying mainly because she says she has "Asperger's." I think I may have already said this about her before, but if anyone knows anything about her early development, she claims to have had "severe autism." You don't go from "severe autism" to "Asperger's", anyone with even a basic understanding of the Autism Spectrum would know that. And she calls it "Asperger"... that irks me for some reason. You don't have Hans Asperger, do you?

One of the misconceptions is you can't. In fact you can because of the continuum nature of autism. You can go forward or backward at different times in your life. Why that is remains a mystery.
This is why Asperger's is autism and not a separate condition.



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03 Apr 2011, 7:55 pm

Good for you Ruveyn and ooOoOoOAnaOoOoOoo

Excellent points you both made.



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03 Apr 2011, 8:13 pm

I think is inspirational in that she overcome many issues. But I don't agree with everything she said. I would more likely call her HFA, she can be a little bit on the offensive side at times and I'm not sure where I stand on the whole cure debate. I try not to stand anywhere. I can see what motivates people to have their views but I have none of my own.
I like some of the things she says especially when explaining her visual world.

Disliking her for a few things is a little harsh though. What if we were in her place? I certainly know I'd say a few things that might be seen as offensive. I do it anyways.


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03 Apr 2011, 8:29 pm

I don't dislike her, myself. Just some things she's said annoys me (like the slob comment in the quoted interview, but there are other things as well).

There are other things that annoy me that I would not actually say have to do directly with her, such has how the media frames her as an autistic spokesperson and how her views seem to get propagated a bit more widely than other autistic people. That is, her views should be out there, I am not saying otherwise. Just that there are other takes, some with more nuance, that are not nearly so well known.