India media outlet’s take on autism
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ASPartOfMe
Veteran
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Joined: 25 Aug 2013
Age: 67
Gender: Male
Posts: 36,726
Location: Long Island, New York
Quote:
“What would happen if the Autism gene was eliminated from the gene pool?” Dr Temple Grandin had once asked. He provided the answer as well ~ “You would have a bunch of people standing around in a cave , chatting and socialising and not getting anything done.”
Autism is an exceptional behavioural phenomenon that has had an impact on our cultural imagination. It has eluded conventional definition and treatment. Parents of children with autism interact with psychologists and pharmaceutical giants who insist on treating the disorder from a biological or behavioural standpoint. It is incredible that people suffering from autism are unique in their vision of the world and it is not just a coincidence that the word ‘autistic’ is confused with ‘artistic’.
Children with autism seem to embody and magnify what is happening in the collective environment. Autistic people play the same role in society as do artists who .have the ability to bring into consciousness things that are in the unconscious of the collective culture. People with uncanny gifts of expressing the truth through creative activity ought not to be overlooked.
n dealing with autism one must remember that behaviour is a form of communication. If we can change the environment, then behaviour will also change. Those who deal with autism must know this through their experience in dealing with children with creative, funny, highly intelligent, aggressive, impulsive, non-social behavioural traits. In India we have a habit of compartmentalising everything into simplistic categories. Autism is rather conveniently diagnosed as physical and/or mental retardation and there is an attempt to diagnose the disability as a neurotypical or neurodivergent affliction. This is an attempt to skirt the basic problem. Stephen M Shore had once appropriately remarked: “If you have met one individual with autism, you’ve met one individual with autism.” Inside every person there is a strength and a tenacity to survive, but sometimes when a child is affected with autism he may not know it. Our prime social duty is to provide these autistic children the correct kind of assistance.
Autistic children are quite unexpectedly found to be artistic. They reveal a capacity for profound expression that reveals an intimate and unimpeded relationship with their creative source. This takes varied forms such as writing, visual imagery, acting and logical reasoning.
Dr Colin Zimbleman received his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute in California. He is now working now as a therapist for STAR Autism in Ventura, California. From his experience of working for autistic children he realised the gravity of the ailment and correctly described it, saying “Autism offers a chance for us to glimpse an awe-filled vision of the world that might otherwise pass us by.”
Young people with severe autism are languishing in hospitals. They shout, bang their heads on walls and are then are admitted to hospitals, where they lead a lonely life. But what they really need is not treatment but care which society is yet to realise. The numbers of those affected by or born with autism is increasing. But society has little or no provision to look after them.
Autism is often confused as a physical or mental challenge. In point of fact, it is neither a physical nor mental affliction. It is a special form of behavioural disorder. Care needs to be provided in community settings, which is a very difficult proposition.
The hospital is a wrong place for the autistic children or adolescents. People with acute autism cannot go beyond the mental age of a child and long-term care which is needed is not available or always possible. To cure autism, socialisation skills are imperative. Child specialists in hospitals need special training to deal with autism and psychiatric units must have a special service package for autistic children.
Autism is an exceptional behavioural phenomenon that has had an impact on our cultural imagination. It has eluded conventional definition and treatment. Parents of children with autism interact with psychologists and pharmaceutical giants who insist on treating the disorder from a biological or behavioural standpoint. It is incredible that people suffering from autism are unique in their vision of the world and it is not just a coincidence that the word ‘autistic’ is confused with ‘artistic’.
Children with autism seem to embody and magnify what is happening in the collective environment. Autistic people play the same role in society as do artists who .have the ability to bring into consciousness things that are in the unconscious of the collective culture. People with uncanny gifts of expressing the truth through creative activity ought not to be overlooked.
n dealing with autism one must remember that behaviour is a form of communication. If we can change the environment, then behaviour will also change. Those who deal with autism must know this through their experience in dealing with children with creative, funny, highly intelligent, aggressive, impulsive, non-social behavioural traits. In India we have a habit of compartmentalising everything into simplistic categories. Autism is rather conveniently diagnosed as physical and/or mental retardation and there is an attempt to diagnose the disability as a neurotypical or neurodivergent affliction. This is an attempt to skirt the basic problem. Stephen M Shore had once appropriately remarked: “If you have met one individual with autism, you’ve met one individual with autism.” Inside every person there is a strength and a tenacity to survive, but sometimes when a child is affected with autism he may not know it. Our prime social duty is to provide these autistic children the correct kind of assistance.
Autistic children are quite unexpectedly found to be artistic. They reveal a capacity for profound expression that reveals an intimate and unimpeded relationship with their creative source. This takes varied forms such as writing, visual imagery, acting and logical reasoning.
Dr Colin Zimbleman received his doctorate in Clinical Psychology from Pacifica Graduate Institute in California. He is now working now as a therapist for STAR Autism in Ventura, California. From his experience of working for autistic children he realised the gravity of the ailment and correctly described it, saying “Autism offers a chance for us to glimpse an awe-filled vision of the world that might otherwise pass us by.”
Young people with severe autism are languishing in hospitals. They shout, bang their heads on walls and are then are admitted to hospitals, where they lead a lonely life. But what they really need is not treatment but care which society is yet to realise. The numbers of those affected by or born with autism is increasing. But society has little or no provision to look after them.
Autism is often confused as a physical or mental challenge. In point of fact, it is neither a physical nor mental affliction. It is a special form of behavioural disorder. Care needs to be provided in community settings, which is a very difficult proposition.
The hospital is a wrong place for the autistic children or adolescents. People with acute autism cannot go beyond the mental age of a child and long-term care which is needed is not available or always possible. To cure autism, socialisation skills are imperative. Child specialists in hospitals need special training to deal with autism and psychiatric units must have a special service package for autistic children.
The article is baffling to me, it says we are these wonderful creative neccessary people, argues to stop hospitalization yet uses words the words, cure, tragedy, and gravity. Perhaps something is being lost in translation or in India they have found a way to merge ND and “curabee” thinking in way that is too advanced for me to understand.
_________________
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
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