xile123 wrote:
Pretty much everyone on both sides of my family recoginzies my Autism except for my Dad and Uncle. They are stuck in some backwards 60s/70s mind-set where if you dont behave exactly like rainman then you're not Autistic and that my abnormal behavior and experiences are caused solely by life style choices. "Its the video games!". "It's society!" "No, back in my day we didn't have Autism or ADHD, we just gave kids a good belting and that sorted out their behavior!"
/spit
I was born in 1957 so I am quite familiar with that mindset and I can assure your uncle and dad we were around it was just that they did not see us. In the 60's/70's most people knew little or nothing about autism. It was considered a rare childhood affliction and was considered an esoteric topic in the psychiatry world. Rain Man was still in the future (1988). There were other very unflattering lables given officially and unofficially to autistic people. It was "sink or swim" world. If you "failed" and obvoius, autistic or not you were officially a "mental defective" or as commonly known "crazy" and were institutionalized and never heard from again. Dad and Uncle did not see institutionilized autistics in their classes. Otherwise you just muddled through the bullying and not really understanding why. Dad, Uncle and us had no reason to think it was anything but our flaws of character.
FYI In the 60's/70's a lot of parents thought thier "hippie" kids were spoiled brats. They said that long hair is horrible you could not tell who is a boy or who is girl. And they derided that "noise" the kids were listining to (ironically known as "classic rock" today). It was all the fault of the television in every home, and Dr. Spock who wrote very popular child rearing books. When he became a prominent anti war activist it was thought he was a communist agent who had poisoned the younger generation with his "permissive" recommendations. A good beating was needed to knock sense into them it was thought. So you see in some ways the more things change the more they stay the same.
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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity
“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman
Last edited by ASPartOfMe on 14 Nov 2016, 4:36 am, edited 10 times in total.