Ellingtonia wrote:
I thought the interviewer seemed a little condescending, but I am quite interested in the book. Is there anywhere online I can read some excerpts?
Agreed. She was a bit that way but I don't think it was out of malice. Most people aren't quite sure where Autism fits in the scheme of things. They know Autistic people can be or are very intelligent, but also that it is a 'condition' or syndrome that requires a diagnosis, and that it therefore must also require some alterations to their normal behaviour set that they usually use with non-Autistics. Because of the almost dichotomous situation in which they find themselves, they don't seem to know (in my opinion) how to talk to people with Asperger's or Autism. "Should I talk up or down to this person?", "This person is lucid, smart, and looks completely normal but has a condition that changes something about them but I don't really know exactly what..." etc. They usually pick a friendly but somewhat condescending tone, as if they are talking to a highly intelligent child.
About the interview: if I'm honest, my main thoughts were: 1. I'm jealous of your bone structure and 2. I feel so strongly for you about the hard times in your life - I remember pain like that and I shudder to think of anyone else feeling the same.
Last edited by Lexa on 05 Jun 2012, 1:15 pm, edited 1 time in total.