MishLuvsHer2Boys wrote:
Considering everyone on the autism spectrum is unique whether they have Autism or Aspergers, there is very little you could put in a 'toy' or a 'doll' that would ever accurately reflect what it is like to be an individual on the autism spectrum. First of all there is no distinctive look to those on the autism spectrum like there is with Down Syndrome, so we don't really look any different than anyone else, secondly, it'd be extremely difficult without years and all of research into some form of technology that can accurately reproduce behaviors/deficits etc. and lastly, even if you could get some behaviors in there... you'd be creating an ever bigger stereotype as non-autistics tend to look at general myths etc. and all as fact and would look at us as they already do... rocking, banging head, etc. because you wouldn't capture all the uniqueness of limited interests, stimming, etc. we all have even on this forum it's easy to see that there is no one individual that is truly able to be compared to another individual on the forum.
If anything, I think it'd just increase the general non-autistic population's propensity to generalize and stereotype on very little fact and more towards believing myths when it comes to us.
If you want to increase awareness, it has to be the human beings affected by it to truly represent it, not some toy.
Agreed. There is no real "look" of Aspergers/Austism. If you were to just see me, like at work, you wouldn't even consider the possibility that there might be something different about my mind. Of course, once you did talk to me it would become noticable. Even then it's not very noticable except to people who have experience with autism. I come across in general as "a litte eccentric but an alright guy."