dryope wrote:
Nothing yet. Is it worth being pushy about this? I am really not sure.
Anyway, to paraphrase Virginia Woolf: that a famous university has been cursed by an autistic woman is a matter of complete indifference to a famous university.
Institutions certainly seem interested in their own smooth functioning! Now, don't they? And I suppose this also applies to small institutions.
Perhaps just a follow-up email. And maybe the immediate goal is to just get them to listen to the autism community more broadly.
I have done peace activism off and on for a long time including the first Persian Gulf War, build-up in 1990 with the war itself in '91 (and the continued embargo afterwards including on things affecting food and medicine which may have actually been the worse part). And yes, I'm very aware that it was a popular war, and the fact that history may not always view it as such is actually pretty thin consolation. Activism is hard work and lonely work. And I think even lonelier the fact that I'm spectrum and did not really connect with too many fellow activists. and the very few kind of beginning stages of friendship did not last too long, and that hurt, too.
I try not to do things out of a misplaced sense of obligation for that's often dry as dust. If it's something that I'm down for, win, lose, or draw, or something I'm energized about, that's a different story.
For example, Molly Troubletail puts forward the excellent possibility about sending your letter to the school paper. And it's possible your letter will be widely misunderstood with a dozen angry responses. More likely, it will be completely ignored. So, let's say you're mentally and emotionally prepared to make one reply to what you view as the most important response to your letter. And you've kind of made that good strategic next step decision. But then there are no responses. And that's kind of exhausting, too. To be up for potential public debate and dialogue, and then nothing happens. Of course, people still read the letter and think. That's a positive. And it does some good even if you make the conscious decision not to check the in the following days for responses.
If you can find one real live co-activist on campus or even just a person interested in seeing you getting a fair shake, that can be a real help. But that can be easier said than done. And often I'm not real good at letting people know my personal boundaries, including that I need boatloads of alone time.
It goes without saying that we at Wrong Planet will continue provide solidarity and info to the best of our abilities!