AUTISM NETWORK
INTERNATIONAL: THE DEVELOPMENT OF A COMMUNITY AND
ITS CULTURE
Jim Sinclair
© January 2005
The American Heritage(r)
Dictionary of the English Language (2000) defines
"community" in
part as: A group of people having common interests," "A group viewed
as forming a distinct segment of society," "Similarity or
identity" and "Sharing, participation, and fellowship." Its
entries for "culture" include "The totality of socially
transmitted behavior patterns, arts, beliefs, institutions, and all
other
products of human work and thought," "These patterns, traits, and
products considered as the expression of a particular period, class,
community,
or population," and "The predominating attitudes and behavior that
characterize the functioning of a group or organization."
Nearly all the operative
terms in those definitions would seem
to be at odds with the traditional view of autism as profound
impairment in
social functioning. Autistic people are seen as lacking the ability to
share
common interests with others, disconnected from social participation
and
fellowship, and inaccessible to social transmission of behaviors and
attitudes.
How, then, can we speak of autistic community and autistic culture?
This article will
describe how one particular group of autistic
people joined together on the basis of common interests, and grew into
a
community. Along the way I will tell you a bit about the culture that
has
developed within that community. It is my hope that through this
introduction
to my community, you will begin to reconsider many of the assumptions
you may
have about autistic social characteristics. Is it always correct to
view
differences between the behavior of autistics and NTs as "symptoms"
of some "disorder" in autistic people? Is it necessarily helpful to
respond to such differences by trying to teach autistic people to
emulate NT
social behaviors so they can "fit in" with NT culture? What
alternatives might there be for addressing social difficulties between
autistic
and NT people? These are some questions you should ask yourself as you
read
this article.
A disclaimer: I can only
report about the culture that has
developed within the Autism Network International community. Other
autistic
communities may have very different cultures. To the best of my
knowledge, ANI
was the first autistic community to be created naturalistically by
autistic
people, and it remains the largest autistic-run organization to have
regular
physical gatherings of autistic people.
First
encounters
Autism Network
International was created by a handful of verbal
autistic people who had made contact with each other via a penpal list
maintained by a parent-run organization. A few of us had also met each
other in
person at autism conferences. But typical autism conferences, run by
and for NT
parents and professionals, do not tend to be very good places for
autistic
people to connect meaningfully with each other. There's simply too much
going
on--too many people, too much movement, too much noise, often
fluorescent
lights, and above all, the overwhelming onslaught of speakers and
articles and
exhibits all stressing that there's something terribly wrong
with us,
that we're a horribly defective type of human, and that our very
existence is a
source of never-ending grief for our families.
Some of us came to autism
conferences anyway, because we had no
other way to meet others like ourselves. But even if we did happen to
find
other autistic people there, the environment was very hostile from both
a
sensory and an emotional standpoint. At best, meeting at conferences
gave us a
chance to find out about the existence of someone we might want to get
to know
better, and to exchange contact information so we could follow up
later,
usually by means of writing letters. Not many of us were on the
Internet at the
time.
In February 1992 Donna
Williams came to the U.S. to promote her
first book, Nobody Nowhere. During her trip, she took a few
days away
from the book tour to visit with Kathy Lissner (now Kathy Grant) and
me, two of
the autistic people she had been corresponding with through the penpal
list. I
drove to St. Louis, Missouri, where Kathy lived, and we all stayed
together in
Kathy's apartment.
Donna's description of
that visit can be found on pages 184-187
of her second book, Somebody Somewhere. We spent two or three
days
together, in a place where everyone was autistic, and where
there were
only three of us instead of a large crowd. We were all somewhat
familiar with
each other through our written correspondence; Kathy and I had also met
briefly
in person at a conference or two. The combination of these factors
produced a
new kind of autistic encounter that was vastly different from meeting
other
autistic people at NT conferences. Donna's description of the
experience reads
in part:
Despite
thousands of
miles, our 'our world'
concepts, strategies, and experiences even came down to having created
the same
made-up words to describe them. Together we felt like a lost tribe.
'Normal' is
to be in the company of one like one's self.
[]
We all had a sense of belonging, of being
understood, of being normal . . . all
the things we could not get from others in general. It was so sad to
have to
leave. 'Why can't we all
My own recollection of
this meeting is of feeling that, after a
life spent among aliens, I had met someone who came from the same
planet as me.
We understood each other. At one point I overheard Donna talking on the
phone
to someone associated with her book tour. Apparently the caller had
asked her
something about how the visit was going. I heard Donna's answer: "We
don't
get a lot of cooking done, but we speak the same language."
It was an amazing and
powerful experience to be able to
communicate with someone in my own language. I had sometimes been able
to
establish meaningful communication with people before, but it always
involved
my having to learn the other person's language and do constant
laborious
translating. (Sinclair, 1988) Here, with people who shared my language,
meaning
flowed freely and easily.
Autistic socializing
Even before I met Donna
in person I had
recognized that she must have some visual fixations, because she would
always
enclose some shiny or brightly-colored object in each of her letters.
When I
was going to meet her, I thought of bringing something shiny as a gift,
but I
didn't have enough of a feel for it to know what would be appropriate.
Then
during the time I spent with her, I watched her go into fits of ecstasy
while arranging
colorful objects and looking at them through a kaleidoscope.... And
while she
was engaging in this activity of arranging objects and looking at them
through
her scope, she kept insisting that Kathy and I look at them too.
Of
course, being autistic I'm not supposed to understand things like this,
but to
me that looked suspiciously like a person wanting to share a
pleasurable
activity with her friends. And for my part, having seen her reach the
peak of
rapture over an empty Coke can, and having heard her say that metallic
red was
her favorite visual stimulus, I knew what would be an appropriate gift
for her.
I got a red sequins-covered belt from Kmart and sent it to her: pretty
tacky
from a fashion perspective, but just right for someone with her sensory
responses. (Sinclair, 1992)
In the years since that
first meeting, I have seen this kind of
spontaneous sharing of pleasure in fixations and stimming occur again
and again
among autistic people. It is an aspect of the autistic culture that has
evolved
within this autistic community.
Besides communication and
fun, we also began to glimpse the
possibilities of autistic peer support. It's true, as Donna said, that
we
didn't get a lot of cooking done; but what did get done was usually a
result of
our reminding each other that it was time to eat or that the soup
someone had
put in the microwave was ready. All of us had significant difficulties
managing
the tasks of everyday life. But between the three of us, someone was
generally
able to remember and to remind about the really necessary things.
We speculated that if we
could all live near each other, we
could divide up the activities of daily living so that each of us would
only
need to remember and organize 1/3 of the tasks. We could share the
responsibility
for reminding each other when it was time to cook, eat, bathe, etc.
Thirteen years later this
idea of a permanent physical
community, where autistic people could live together and support each
other,
still gets discussed from time to time on the ANI-L email list and at
Autreat
conferences. Maybe someday we'll have the material resources needed to
try to
make it happen.
Autistic adults as a
resource for parents
In this case the parents,
Rita and Doyle, were actually foster
parents. They were knowingly and voluntarily becoming parents of an
autistic
child, taking into their family a teenager who was completely
nonverbal, not
toilet trained, not able to feed herself, and was sometimes
self-injurious.
Some time earlier, Doyle had posted a query on an Internet forum I was
on,
asking for advice about teaching his foster daughter to chew solid
food. I had
noticed that he lived in St. Louis, and had referred him to Kathy
because she
lived in the same city. Now, with Donna and me coming to town for this
visit,
he had asked if he could come over and meet us. We agreed to spend a
couple of
hours with him one evening.
The dynamic of our first
meeting with Doyle and Rita was similar
to that of many interactions between autistic adults and parents of
autistic
children within NT-dominated autism organizations (including online
forums):
They saw us as a valuable resource, and hoped that we would be able to
give
them first-hand information that would allow them to understand and
help the
autistic person in their lives.
We were willing to help
them if we could, because we did care
about the welfare of their autistic child who couldn't communicate for
herself.
The NT world might call her "low-functioning" and us
"high-functioning," but we saw her as part of our world. Donna talked
to Rita on the phone during the afternoon, and in the evening Doyle
came to
Kathy's apartment to meet with us in person. (We did not meet the
autistic
foster daughter during that visit, but Kathy and I met her at many of
our later
gatherings.)
As it turned out, this
particular set of parents respected us
and liked us for ourselves, not merely as tools to help them understand
their
child. Kathy and I both formed lasting friendships with them, and in
the coming
years they often opened their home and gave their support to other
gatherings
of autistic people. When Doyle and Rita, and many other parents, became
our
friends, we became comfortable sharing our space with them. They even
became
important parts of our community. But on that first evening, during our
first
creation of "autistic space," we knew them only as non-autistic
people wanting to use us as a resource to help them with their child.
And we
responded with what has continued to be a characteristic feature of the
autistic community that has grown from that first meeting: We set
boundaries
between the time we gave to them and the time we reserved for
ourselves. We
agreed to spend some time answering questions about our experiences of
autism,
but we set limits on how much time. The non-autistic parent came over,
we
talked with him for a while, and then he went home and we had our own
autistic
space again.
Making
it happen: The next steps
So--we spent a
couple of days together, and we communicated, and
had fun, and helped each other, and we talked to parents in the hope
that our
experiences might help them help their child. And we decided that
autistic
space was a good thing for autistic people to have. We decided to start
our own
organization, rather than continue to be dependent on NT-run
organizations to
help us find each other and to provide the only places where we could
meet.
Since Kathy and I lived
about 300 miles apart, and Donna lived
on another continent, we had to settle for distance communication: a
printed
newsletter, and a penpal list for private person-to-person
communication. This
was modeled after the parent-oriented organization whose penpal list
had
enabled us to make contact with each other. But our newsletter would be
written
by and for autistic people, not just another "parent" newsletter. I
volunteered to edit it. That's how I became coordinator of Autism
Network
International.
We called it a "network,"
not a "community."
At that time, I really didn't believe "community" would be a
meaningful concept for autistic people. We don't tend to function very
well in
groups, let alone as groups. Autistic connections seem to be
made on a
person-to-person basis, one person at a time.
In our new autistic network, as we envisioned it, the newsletter
would
be the vehicle for information-sharing among the group as a whole,
while the
penpal list would allow for contact among people who wished to have
person-to-person contact.
Defining membership: Who
are "we"?
Right away we had to
make some decisions about who could be
included in our organization: Autistic people only, or would parents
and
professionals also be allowed to join? "High-functioning" autistic
people only, or all autistic people?
At that time it was still
generally believed that
"high-functioning" autistic people were a rarity. The term
"Asperger syndrome" was just beginning to be introduced in the United
States. Autistic people who could speak fluently, who could read and
write, who
could demonstrate self-awareness and insight into their own
experiences, who
could participate in higher education, have jobs, and live
independently--these
were still viewed as novelties, exceptions to the general rule that
autistic
people are severely learning disabled. (The fact that while many of us
are
capable of doing some of those "high-functioning" things, very
few of us are actually capable of doing all of them, is still
not widely
recognized. The tendency is to assume that those of us with a high
degree of
verbal ability are "high-functioning" in all other areas as well. The
reality is quite different.)
Kathy and Donna and I had
found each other through a penpal list
maintained by an organization of parents of "high-functioning" or
"more able" autistic people. We all communicated using language (both
oral and written). We all had university degrees. We all lived on our
own.
Notwithstanding our various difficulties with sensory processing,
social
comprehension, emotional modulation, employment, adequate self-care,
household
management, and assorted other life skills, we were all considered to
be
"high-functioning." We could have kept our focus only on other
autistic people who were also "high-functioning."
But we had all fit
descriptions of "low-functioning"
autistic people when we were younger. We all recognized commonalities
between
ourselves and autistic people who were still considered
"low-functioning." We also recognized abilities and strengths in many
autistic people who just didn't happen to share our skills in using
language.
We decided that our
mission was to advocate for civil rights and
self-determination for all autistic people, regardless of
whether they
were labeled "high-" or "low-functioning," and regardless
of whether they were able to participate independently in our
language-based
network. To that end, we understood that we really had to make our
newsletter
available to parents and professionals, because educating parents and
professionals was the only way we could hope to affect the lives of
autistic
people who weren't able to participate on their own. But we decided
that the
penpal list was to be confidential, for autistic people only. Once
again, we
set boundaries between our public activity and willingness to serve as
a
resource for non-autistic people, and our private autistic connections.
Spreading the word
Kathy immediately
began mailing announcements about ANI to all
the (NT-run) autism organizations she could find in the U.S. Donna
worked on
spreading the word internationally during her book tours. And I, the
only one
of us who had Internet access at the time, posted announcements online.
I was a
member of a new online autism mailing list, and for a while I was the
only
autistic person in that forum. Most of the other members of the mailing
list
were parents of young autistic children; a few were professionals who
worked
with autistic people. As usual for an autistic person trying to
participate in
an NT-oriented autism forum, most of my participation consisted of
describing
my personal experiences of autism, and trying to answer parents'
questions
about whether my experiences might shed light on their children's
behavior. It
was an autism forum, but it was definitely not "autistic space."
I printed the first issue
of "Our Voice," the ANI
newsletter, in November 1992. We had about fifteen subscribers, most of
whom
were non-autistic parents of autistic children. It was hard to find
other
autistic people. In terms of numbers, the initial response was
discouraging.
Hostile responses from established (NT-run) autism organizations were
also
unexpected and upsetting.
Encountering
Opposition
When I had first
started seeking to communicate with other
autistic people in the late 1980s, I had approached autism
organizations and
professionals who worked with autistic people, in the naïve belief
that they
and I, and other verbal autistic people, had some common purpose. My
purposes
in seeking to form a mutual aid-self help group for autistic people
were to
share first-hand experiences to counter the uniformly gloomy and
pessimistic
(and often offensive and insulting) portrayals of autism in the
existing
literature; and to advocate for improved support services for autistic
people.
(At the time I began my search, I had lost my job and was homeless, but
I was
unable to qualify for any assistance because I was considered "too
bright
to be disabled.") It seemed to me that these goals ought to be shared
by
people who were interested in learning about autism or in helping
autistic
people. But most of the responses ranged from total indifference to
empty
encouraging words that were not backed up with any action--people would
say it
sounded like a good idea, but would not run announcements about the
project in
their newsletters or put other verbal autistic people in contact with
me. The only
two exceptions to this pattern were the organization for parents of
"more
able" autistic people, which occasionally printed letters from autistic
people and maintained the penpal directory through which I eventually
contacted
Kathy and Donna; and an autism professional who arranged a scholarship
for me
to attend a conference (the first autism conference I ever attended, in
fact),
and set aside a room during one of the conference sessions for any
autistic
people who wanted to meet. No other newsletters were printing our
letters, no
other conferences were facilitating contact among autistic people, and
no one
else was offering any practical support whatsoever to autistic peer
contact. (A
few professionals, though, did take advantage of my meetings with them
to ask
me personal questions about my experience of autism.)
Even worse, it seemed
that when we did manage to find each other
and work together to further our goals, responses from the "autism
establishment" escalated from indifference to active subterfuge. By the
summer of 1991, several of us had made contact with each other via the
penpal
directory, and the 1991 Autism Society of America national conference
was the
first conference I attended where I met autistic people whom I already
knew.
Several of us made a point of asking questions or making comments
during the
question-and-answer portions of as many presentations as possible,
always
identifying ourselves as autistic people. The presenters seemed pleased
with
our contributions, and a great many audience members sought us out
afterward to
talk to us and ask us questions.
Our visible presence at
the 1991 conference, and the obvious
interest many parents had in meeting us, drew the attention of the ASA
Board of
Directors. Two of us were approached by a Board member and some other
parents,
and asked if we would like the Board to help us form a committee that
would be
advisory to the Board and would have some input into ASA and its future
conferences. We accepted on the spot. We were told that our committee
would be
allowed to have a representative present at ASA Board meetings; would
have some
input into planning the 1992 national conference (both in the
organization of
facilities to be accessible to autistic people, and in the selection of
presentations); and would be given space in the ASA newsletter. In
addition,
when we told them that we were already working on forming an
organization of
our own, they offered us some unspecified amount of financial and/or
administrative support for creating our own autistic self-advocacy
organization.
None of these promises
was honored. The only mention the ASA
newsletter carried of our attempts at autistic self-advocacy was an
item in the
précis of the July 1991 Board meeting, authorizing one of the
Board members to take
charge of organizing an advisory committee of autistic people--and
we never
heard from them again about that committee, despite several follow-up
phone
calls I made. One of the ASA Board members later confirmed my suspicion
that
these offers were merely empty gestures by a Board that wanted to
impress
parents of autistic people--who hold most of the voting power in
ASA--but who
didn't expect to have to follow through because they never expected
autistic
people to be capable of organizing ourselves.
When, contrary to
expectations, we did begin organizing
ourselves and announced the establishment of ANI, ASA continued to
ignore the
announcements we repeatedly submitted for inclusion in the newsletter.
But now
there did begin to be some acknowledgment of the existence of autistic
people
trying to self-advocate, in the form of rumors started by some ASA
Board
members to the effect that I was not really autistic. (This despite of
the fact
that my records had been reviewed by two psychologists who were members
of the
ASA professional advisory board, and both had stated--one of them under
oath at
a rehabilitation services hearing--that I am indeed autistic.) In a
clear
attempt to undermine our group cohesion, Kathy and some other autistic
adults
were directly "warned" that I was not what I claimed to be.
Meanwhile, Donna was encountering similar denunciations as her book
began to
receive international attention.
Contexts and politics of
opposition to self-advocacy
At the time all this
was happening, it took me completely by
surprise. Nearly all of us who were involved in the earliest period of
ANI had
met many parents of autistic children, at conferences and local parent
support
groups. Almost invariably, the parents were pleased and excited to hear
from us.
True, their primary interest was in using us as resources for their
children
rather than supporting us in our own goals; but still, they were not hostile
toward us. It seems that one autistic person at a time--and preferably
a
passive one--might be welcomed as an interesting novelty or an amusing
diversion or possibly even a valuable source of information and
insight. But
autistic people organizing together, autistic people pursuing our own
interests
rather than furthering the interests of parents and
professionals--suddenly we
were perceived as a threat.
Only several years later,
while researching the history of
self-advocacy by disabled people (Sinclair, 1996), did I learn of the
long
history of similar opposition to attempts at self-advocacy and
self-determination
by people with a variety of disabilities (Kugelmass, 1951; Putnam,
1979;
Williams & Shoultz, 1982; Van Cleve & Crouch, 1989; Lane, 1992;
Shapiro, 1993; Christiansen & Barnartt, 1995; Dybwad & Bersani,
1996;
Kennedy, 1996). Any attempt by a group
of disempowered people to challenge the status quo--to dispute the
presumption
of their incompetence, to redefine themselves as equals of the
empowered class,
to assert independence and self-determination--has been met by
remarkably
similar efforts to discredit them. The discrediting tactics used most
frequently are:
1) If at all possible, to
deny that the persons mounting the
challenge are really members of the group to which they claim
membership. This
tactic has been used against disability activists with learning
disabilities
and psychiatric disabilities as well as against autistic people. As
people with
these disabilities often look "normal" and the disabilities are all
defined in terms of behavior rather than empirically measurable
physical differences,
many of us have been told that the very fact that we are able to
express
ourselves, object to the ways our freedom has been restricted or our
rights
violated, and demand change proves that we cannot truly be autistic, or
learning disabled, or psychiatrically impaired.
2) If there is
incontrovertible evidence that the activists are
members of the affected group, to aver that they are rare exceptions
who are so
unlike typical members of the affected group that what they have to say
is
irrelevant to the group as a whole. Michael Kennedy, who obviously and
indisputably has cerebral palsy, explains the destructive impact of
this
tactic:
When people tell me that
I am “higher
functioning” than the people they are talking about, I feel like they
are
telling me that I don't have anything in common with other people with
disabilities. It's like they are putting me in a whole
different category and saying that I don't have any right
to speak. It upsets me because I take
it that they don't want to give anyone else the opportunities I have
been
given, and that what I say can be ignored because they see me as more
capable.
It is a way of dividing us and putting down those who have more severe
disabilities or who haven't had the opportunities to experience
different
situations in life.
(Kennedy,
1996)
3) If it is not possible
to deny that the activists are
authentic representatives of the affected group, to appeal to the very
prejudices and stereotypes the activists are seeking to overturn, and
use those
prejudices and stereotypes to claim that the activists are incapable of
fully
understanding their situations and knowing what is best for them. Often
this
approach incorporates the belief that disabled people need to have
their
freedom restricted for their own good, to protect them from coming to
harm
through their inability to act in their own best interests.
These strategies to
undermine credibility are not new, nor are
they limited to situations involving disability. Frederick Douglass was
a
nineteenth-century African American who
escaped from slavery in 1838 and became a well-known abolitionist
writer and
speaker. In his 1855 autobiography My Bondage and My Freedom,
he
recalled that at the beginning of his career speaking to white
audiences about
the evils of slavery, he was presented as something of a curiosity.
Most
anti-slavery lecturers where white; lecturers who were themselves
fugitive
slaves were a rarity. As the novelty wore off, people began to doubt
that he
had ever been a slave. He was suspected of being an impostor because he
was too
educated and too well-spoken to fit prevailing stereotypes about the
ignorance
of slaves. He also expressed frustration with white abolitionists'
demand that
he confine his speeches to simply recounting his personal experiences
of
slavery, and allow white people to elaborate on what they meant: "Give
us
the facts, we will take care of the philosophy." Eventually Douglass
stopped working for white abolitionists and started his own
anti-slavery
publication.
Becoming
a group, one person at a time
It happened that I was
going to be traveling through St. Louis
in the near future, so I suggested another meeting there. Katherine
came to St.
Louis and met with Kathy and me, as well as Kathy's fiancé Ray,
Doyle, Rita,
and their family. She wrote of the experience:
For me, this day will
become an anniversary
that I will celebrate with great joy. It marks the beginning of not
being an
alien. It will be a day of validation. A day to set aside and remember.
[]
That night [first night after arriving] in
my journal I wrote that if nothing else of significance happened during
this
trip that one experience of being understood was worth all the time
[]
My visit to St. Louis literally changed my
life. I now know that there is a group of people I can spend time with
who do
not expect me to be any certain way. Not many things surprise them, nor
do many
things offend them. They do not try to make me like them. They accept
my
interests and don't try to change them. I believe all persons with
Autism need
the opportunity to become friends with other Autistic people. Without
this
contact we feel alien to this world. We feel lonely. Feeling like an
alien is a
slow death. It's sadness, self-hate, it's continuously striving to be
someone
we're not. It's waking up each day and functioning in falsehood.
(French,
1993)
Katherine's experience
mirrored that of Kathy and Donna and
myself when we had first met and created an autistic space. This
experience was
repeated with more people as ANI expanded. While we were not successful
in
reaching large numbers of autistic people via announcements in
established
autism publications, autistic people began to find us, one by one.
(As an aside, I felt a
great deal of personal pleasure and
satisfaction in watching Katherine have the same kind of magical "first
contact" experience that I had had the year before. At a later
gathering
where we welcomed two additional autistic people for their autistic
first
contact, Katherine expressed to me that she was happy to be part of
creating
that experience for them. Facilitating these kinds of first contact and
homecoming experiences for autistic people continues to be one of the
most
rewarding parts of my work as coordinator of ANI; this sentiment has
often been
expressed by other ANI members about welcoming newcomers. Where is the
famed
autistic lack of empathy?)
Looking back at this
period of ANI's history, I think it's best
that it happened the way it did. A large influx of new members all at
once
might have made for a larger and (perhaps) more organized political
force; but
it probably would have precluded our coming together as we did, one
person at a
time, building the personal connections that allowed us to learn how to
share
our lives with each other. Organizations may be built upon
goal-oriented
or idea-oriented networks. But as ANI has developed, contrary to my own
expectations, into a true community, I have come to understand
that
community is built on intersecting networks of interpersonal
relationships.
Autistic people have characteristic difficulties with person-to-group
relationships, but many of us are quite capable of establishing and
maintaining
person-to-person relationships.
Routes to ingathering
Online parents' forum
Sola Shelly (2003)
describes the way a typical online contact
would begin:
As the only public forum
about autism at
that time, it was the first place that newly diagnosed HFAs (adults and
adolescents) turned to for support. It was neat to watch this: Someone
would
appear, and either tell about recently being diagnosed, or just
learning about
autism and finding out how “things fall into place” when many of his or
her
difficulties and otherwise abnormal characteristics could be accounted
for by
autism. Then the person would get replies from other HFAs, comparing
notes,
offering support. In many cases, the person would express a feeling of
finally
finding his own kind, as if he or she was an alien who had been
stranded on
this planet, and now has found other aliens who were from the same
planet.
As had been the case when
I was the only autistic person there,
forum participation by autistic people consisted mostly of posting
narrative
descriptions about our lives and being questioned by parents seeking to
understand their autistic children. But as more autistic people began
participating, an increasing number of forum messages began to consist
of peer
communication between autistic people. Private email correspondences
also
developed among autistic people who had initially made contact on the
forum.
Among the autistic people
who learned about ANI and began
communicating with other autistics via the Internet forum, a few
established
personal relationships and eventually became interested in meeting
their online
friends in person. Kathy and I, and Rita and Doyle and their children,
continued to meet occasionally in St. Louis. After I moved to Syracuse,
New
York, in 1994, my house became another location for autistic visits.
These
gatherings were sometimes the occasions for first meetings with new
online
friends. Kathy and Ray's wedding in 1994 featured both the presence of
a
contingent of autistic friends among the many non-autistic family and
community
members, and autistic cultural influences on some of the wedding
customs:
Kathy's fixation with flags was incorporated into part of the ceremony
itself,
and several of her autistic friends presented her with decidedly
non-traditional gifts (such as a used book in Russian that had been
discarded
by a library) relating to her special interests and fixations.
Becoming a presence at
autism conferences
At the group level, ANI
began to exhibit at conferences. Being a
conference exhibitor meant that we had an assigned booth or table in
the
exhibit hall, where we could set up displays and hand out information
about
ANI. The ANI exhibit became a kind of home base for autistic people
during the
conference. While the exhibit halls were usually noisy and crowded,
there was
space behind the table (and also under the table) where a few people
could sit
and not be jostled by the crowd. Despite the difficult sensory
conditions and
the pervasive negativity of the rest of the conference content,
autistic people
would gather at the ANI exhibit to talk, laugh, stim, and revel in each
other's
company.
We also found places to
gather after hours. While NT conference
participants were attending banquet dinners or entertainment
performances or
other large-group activities, autistic people in pairs and small groups
were
finding quiet spots in hallways and cloakrooms and parking lots. Most
of us
couldn't afford rooms at the expensive hotels where the conferences
were held
(I often slept in my car while attending conferences), but if someone
did have
a hotel room, that became another enclave of autistic space.
Finding "home"--or
creating it
This kind of live
contact was not something that was of interest
to every autistic person we encountered online. Obviously if someone
wasn't
interested, he or she did not choose to come to in-person gatherings.
But for
those of us who did come to them, often driving hundreds of miles and
sleeping
in our vehicles or on the floors of other people's rooms, there was a
powerful
shared will to make contact with others like ourselves. Our autistic
contacts
came to be a very important part of our lives. Many of us had never had
friends
before, and had difficult relationships with our families. Finding
people who
actually understood us and liked us, and whom we understood and liked
in
return, was a life-changing experience.
ANI had an exhibit table
at one particular conference in St.
Louis in early 1994. Doyle was able to arrange for a group of us to
camp
indoors on an empty upper floor of a large office building near the
downtown
conference center. All the interior walls on that floor had been
knocked out
for a not-yet-completed renovation process (except, fortunately, a
restroom
remained intact with walls and a door). Naked support beams were
exposed
throughout the space. Bits of crumbled plaster and other building
materials
were everywhere. Piles of debris lurked in corners and against walls.
There was
no furniture; we brought our own mats and sleeping bags, as well as a
couple of
floor lamps, and some empty refrigerator boxes for anyone who wanted to
sleep
in one or needed to retreat alone to a dark enclosed space for a while.
In this huge, dim, dusty,
cavernous space, eight adults, along
with Doyle and Rita's young son (who was not disabled), spent the
weekend.
During the days we went to the conference, took turns staffing the ANI
exhibit
and talking to curious parents, and listened to presenters talk about
all the
tragedies of our lives. In the evenings we returned to our "cave,"
which, like a legendary faerie hill, was transformed into a magical
place of
celebration.
During our second day of
camping out in this building, Doyle
pointed out the window at a radio tower and mentioned that it was for
sale. He
jokingly asked me if I thought we should buy it. I asked what possible
use we
might have for a radio tower. Then I looked around the room and, in
keeping
with our frequently shared experience of having always felt like aliens
on
Earth, I remarked that we could use the radio tower to send a message
to the
"mother ship" (a common reference in science fiction stories),
telling it that we were all together now and it could come retrieve us
and take
us home.
But
I'm glad there was no spaceship to come get us back then.
We've found so many more of our people since that day, and there are
still many
more wishing and searching for a community to come home to. We've come
a long
way toward creating a home for ourselves right here on Earth.
Reality
check
At that time there
were not yet any public Internet sites such
as yahoogroups to host email forums. We had to use a listserv on an
academic
server. One of our autistic members set up ANI-L, the Autism Network
International listserv, on a server at his university. We launched our
new
forum in the fall of 1994. In 1996 our member's university announced
that it
was going to discontinue the server, and we moved ANI-L to its current
home on
the Syracuse University server under the sponsorship of a university
faculty
member. (That move represented the first time ANI had ever accepted any
kind of
sponsorship from a non-autistic source. "By autistics for autistics"
has always been a core value of ANI. We do as much as we can for
ourselves, and
rely as little as possible on non-autistic people to take care of ANI
business
for us.)
In many ways, starting
our online forum was similar to starting
our newsletter in 1992. We had a strong commitment to the concept of
autistic
space, where content would be determined by the interests of autistic
people.
We needed to decide once again who would be eligible for membership.
This time,
due to the vicious attacks we'd been subjected to by some of the
parents on the
public autism forum, there were a number of autistic people who felt
strongly
that our forum should be for autistic people only. But ANI had always
allowed
parents to participate in its activities, and some of us felt that it
was important
to remain open to those parents who supported our values and our goals.
Rules and divisions
In the end, we
settled on a decision to allow NT people to join,
but only after securing their agreement to abide by a set of forum
policies
designed to ensure that ANI-L would remain an autistic forum (www.ani.ac/ani-l-info.html).
These detailed rules were
developed from
within
our community to address members' concerns and to prevent the
occurrence in
ANI-L of many negative experiences we had had in the NT-dominated
public forum.
All new members, NT or AC, are required to read them and agree
to honor
them.
As further compromise, we
opened the forum with just autistic
people and cousins at first. NT people were allowed to start joining a
little
later, after the AC members had settled in and gotten some
conversations
underway. When NT people began joining, we appointed two
parents and a professional whom we trusted
to be parent moderators. It was their job to make sure parents
understood the
forum rules, and to respond to parents who got out of line (e.g., by
insulting
autistic communication styles) so the AC listowners would not have to
deal with
hostile parents.
Shortly after ANI-L
started we instituted another safeguard for
the comfort of autistic people who were concerned about dynamics
between
autistic adults and NT parents of autistic children. We subdivided the
forum
into an "AC" section for messages of interest to autistic people and
cousins, and a "Parents' Auxiliary" (PA) section for messages about
parenting (or otherwise providing care and support for) autistic
people.
Another set of rules was developed for determining what messages belong
in each
section (www.ani.ac/ani-l-PA.html).
These sections are not meant to
segregate people
according to their status as AC or NT. Any forum member is permitted to
post
messages in either section. The sections are to indicate message content:
Freedom from pressures
and expectations
For some autistic
people attending Autreat, the sudden absence
of pressures and expectations to behave in certain ways can be quite
disorienting at first. NT people are often disoriented as well, and may
experience culture shock. One NT attendee described feeling unsure of
how to
behave and how to relate to people, confused about how to interpret
other
people’s behavior, and anxious that he might offend people without
realizing it
(personal communication). In other words, he was able to experience at
Autreat
some of the same social confusion and discomfort that autistic people
frequently experience in NT society. While this can be somewhat
disturbing, a
number of NT people have reported that it was a valuable experience
that helped
them to better understand what autistic people go through on a daily
basis.
Many (but, again, not
all) autistic people have felt the same
sense of homecoming at Autreat that characterized the early meetings of
ANI
members in small groups. At the first Autreat in 1996, JohnAlexis
Viereck stated, "I feel as if I'm home,
among
my own people, for the first time. I
never knew what this was until now" (personal communication). This
sentiment is so widespread among regular Autreat attendees that it was
addressed in an Autreat workshop comparing the autism community to a
diaspora
(Schwarz, 1999).
The absence of any
expectation or pressure to socialize, and the
knowledge that they’re free to withdraw at any time, seem to free many
autistic
people to want to socialize. People spontaneously get together
for hikes
or tours of local sites of interest. Sleep deprivation is a common
experience
at Autreat, as conversations and informal discussion groups go on late
into the
night. One morning I watched with interest as people came into the
dining hall
for breakfast. The dining hall was furnished with small tables, about
six or
eight chairs per table, and was large enough to seat about 200 people.
Our
group was small, and some people were eating outside to avoid the noise
and
crowding in the dining hall. There were plenty of empty tables. But at
least
half the people in the room were clustered around just a few of the
tables. As
I watched, more and more people brought their trays to tables that
already had
people sitting at them. As the tables filled up, some people took
chairs from
unoccupied tables and brought them to squeeze around one of the full
ones. In
similar settings in NT society, autistic people would be more likely to
avoid
the occupied tables and to seek out the empty ones.
DECOMPRESSION AND
RE-ENTRY
Some of the
same phenomena that had occurred in small gatherings
of autistic people, and on ANI-L, have also been observed at Autreat.
While
none of these experiences is universal for all autistic people, these
are some
of the things that do occur with some frequency in the ANI community:
Summary
In the last thirteen
years, Autism Network International has
grown from a small group of penpals meeting for the first time in a
small
apartment, to an international community of autistic people who meet
online, in
small informal meetings in private homes, and in our own communal space
at
Autreat. We have certain shared values in affirming the validity of our
way of
being. We have many common experiences both with the experience of
autism
itself, and with being autistic in a world of neurotypicals. We have a
history
of significant events experienced by our community. We have a dynamic,
constantly-evolving set of customs and rules growing out of our shared
experiences and our common needs. We have certain terms, expressions,
and
in-jokes that are distinct to our community. We have children whose
parents are
helping them grow up knowing that it’s okay to be autistic, knowing
other
autistic children and autistic adults, knowing that they’re part of
this
community. The children who attended the first Autreat are teenagers
now; the
children whose parents were among the early members of ANI-L are now
young
adults. It will be interesting to see what this first generation of ANI
children will bring to our community, and to the world, as they come
into their
own.
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