Hope everyone is having an excellent evening. ✨
19.2.2021 01:10Hope everyone is having an excellent evening. ✨Teaching autistic kids
Rust is sooo fun ❤️
If I could find a job where I'm paid to do this, I'd be set. 😂
6.2.2021 20:29Teaching autistic kids Rust is sooo fun ❤️ If I could find a job where I'm paid to do this, I'd be set. 😂@neurodivergence
School:
"When I went to high school, I found out that people really thought in different ways, perceived, puzzled out, acquired information,
verbally. I had such a hard time" 1/2
@neurodivergence
On social cues:
"You always learned from observing. You have to pick things up nonverbally because people will never tell you what you're supposed to know. You have to get it for yourself: whatever it is that you need in order to survive. And if you make a mistake you get punished for it, but that's no big thing. You become strong by doing the things you need to be strong for. This is the way genuine learning takes place."
More on thinking:
Lorde: I used to practice trying to think.
Rich: That thing those other people presumably did. Do you remember what that was like?
Lorde: Yes. I had an image of trying to reach something around a corner, that it was just eluding me. The image was constantly vanishing around the corner.
@neurodivergence
A quote that's made a permanent home in my brain:
"I was constantly reading, but not things that were assigned.
And if I read things that were assigned I didn't read them the way we were supposed to. Everything was like a poem, with different curves, different levels. So I always felt that the ways I took things in were different from the ways other people took them in. I used to practice trying to think."
In 2021, we wouldn't talk about 'getting' a way of thinking from one's mother. We'd talk about inheriting it. But other than that, I'm shaken by how contemporary this interview sounds.
It'd be enlightening and nuanced even if this interview was occurring today.
3.1.2021 02:51@neurodivergenceIn 2021, we wouldn't talk about 'getting' a way of thinking from one's mother. We'd talk about...link to screen-reader inaccessible pdf
If anyone is looking for reading to unwhiten or de-medicalize their understanding of neurodiversity/autism, this interview between Audre Lorde and Adrienne Rich was hugely influential to me. I keep going back to revisit it.
https://www.lettere.uniroma1.it/sites/default/files/2852/audre%20lorde.pdf
Pages 81-88 has the neurodiversity part
The pdf is a scanned copy of the book, and doesn't play nice with screen-readers :(
3.1.2021 02:41link to screen-reader inaccessible pdf@neurodivergence If anyone is looking for reading to unwhiten or de-medicalize their understanding of...