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Lizzie Huxley-Jones

Stim

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Around one in one hundred people in the UK are autistic, and the saying goes that if you've met one autistic person, you've met one autistic person. Autistic people's personalities, differences and experiences outweigh the diagnostic criteria that link them, yet stereotypes persist and continue to inform a fundamental misunderstanding of what it is to be autistic.
Rarely do autistic people get a chance to speak for themselves, but this insightful and eye-opening collection of essays, fiction and visual art showcases the immense talents of eighteen of the world's most exciting autistic writers and artists.
Stim invites the reader into the lives and minds of the contributors, and asks them to recognise the challenges of being autistic in a non-autistic world. Inspired by a desire to place the conversation around autism back into autistic hands, editor Lizzie Huxley-Jones has brought together humorous, honest and hopeful pieces that explore the many facets of being autistic.

Ця книжка зараз недоступна
186 паперових сторінок
Дата публікації оригіналу
2020
Рік виходу видання
2020
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  • forgetenotцитує3 роки тому
    I remember the day I first learned how few of us could live in a world without civilisation. I was fifteen at the time, listening to my biology teacher talk about things that had nothing to do with our exams. Without farming, he’d said, the number of people in the UK would be unsettlingly low – fewer than in a small city, more than in a large town. There would be about as many people as seals, because we were more or less the same size. And I remember feeling disconcerted by that, like I’d never thought of a seal as the same kind of creature as me.
  • forgetenotцитує3 роки тому
    I take out a notebook and write down all the things that made me sad yesterday:

    – The glimpse of a stranger’s shoes.
    – Imagining love lost.
    – An unreturned message.
    – The inertia of January.
    – Having to leave the house and go out into the cold.
    – A lost book.
    – A half-remembered line of poetry.
    – Catching sight of a photograph of my children when they were small and knowing that stage of their life is gone.
    – Not being able to imagine the future.
    – Watching a politician give non-replies on the television.
    – Reading a friend’s tweet.

    Meanwhile, the world outside goes on.
  • forgetenotцитує3 роки тому
    I think I have only ever felt four emotions: the good feeling, the bad feeling, the neutral one and fear.
    The good feeling happens when I am absorbed in something outside myself. I get it when I’m writing, reading or baking a cake. It washes over me when I’m in the company of someone I don’t need to work hard with. I get it when I look at pink things. The good feeling is pink. It is a pink cashmere cardigan. It is candyfloss. It is blonde hair that has been dyed the softest shade of rose. I love the good pink feeling.
    The bad feeling comes in from nowhere, like a sudden storm. It sits heavy on my chest and it is all kinds of wrong. It makes me feel the world is wrong. That I am wrong. That there is so much wrongness that things will never be right again.
    Fear is more like fog. It surrounds me and makes it impossible to see a way forward. It paralyses me, like a rabbit seeing a fox across the field. You can’t outrun fear. When it has you gripped, you have to sit still until it moves on.
    Neutral is my second most favourite feeling. There is nothing bad about it. My husband – who likes life to be big and loud and exciting, full of new sights and tastes and sounds and experiences – calls the neutral place ‘living in the grey’. He cannot understand what it is like to be me and not feel excitement. He is older now and his need to chase highs has diminished, but he still has such capacity for joy.
    If I had to pick one feeling to live with all the time, it would probably be the neutral one. It is comfortable. It is a warm bath or tea and toast in front of the AGA. It isn’t exciting, but it is reassuring and safe.
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