I resign my roles at Autism Speaks
It's been two years since I wrote this essay, as I sat on a plane overwhelmed by the latest outrageous commentary from Autism Speaks. Since then the Wrights have resigned/retired, and Liz Feld is stepping down as president. But will the organization change in a meaningful way? Only time will tell.
Meanwhile we are on to other challenges, like building neurodiversity on campus and developing high school to work transition programs.
I also invite you to read these thoughts on neurodiversity, now and two years ago
In early November 2013, Autism Speaks founder Suzanne Wright published an op-ed piece that laid out her views on autism, and what we should do about “the problem.” Those of you who follow my writing know I am a strong believer in science, and the promise of new tools to remediate the ways autism disables us. However, there is a vast gulf between the tone of Mrs. Wright’s words and my own. I believe we see the situation rather differently. As an autistic person this is a time when I must give primacy to my own life experience and feelings.
Meanwhile we are on to other challenges, like building neurodiversity on campus and developing high school to work transition programs.
I also invite you to read these thoughts on neurodiversity, now and two years ago
In early November 2013, Autism Speaks founder Suzanne Wright published an op-ed piece that laid out her views on autism, and what we should do about “the problem.” Those of you who follow my writing know I am a strong believer in science, and the promise of new tools to remediate the ways autism disables us. However, there is a vast gulf between the tone of Mrs. Wright’s words and my own. I believe we see the situation rather differently. As an autistic person this is a time when I must give primacy to my own life experience and feelings.
I celebrate the gifts autism brings us, and I have discussed
at length the emerging realization that autism – as a neurological difference –
confers both gift and disability on everyone it touches. It’s the fire the moves humanity forward,
while simultaneously being a fire that can burn us individuals as we try to
make our way.
Many autistic people are aware of this dichotomy. Some of us feel “totally disabled” and others
feel “totally gifted.” Most of us – I’d
venture to say – feel both ways, at different times, depending on what we’re
doing at that particular moment.
Consequently, I support the idea of changing society to make
it more accommodating for people who are different. I also support the idea of developing
therapies, treatments, and tools to relieve suffering and disability from both
autism and the conditions that accompany it for some people. I know how hard life is for some on the spectrum, but I also see the gifts other autistics bring. Both are touched by autism, and it's part and parcel of who we are. That's why we face such a difficult challenge, to keep the gifts while relieving the suffering. It's immeasurably harder than simple disease fighting.
If I act a bit different because I’m autistic, I think it’s
my right to do so without being mocked, bullied, or discriminated against. At the same time I realize people are people,
and if I act like a jerk, I will be treated as one. I understand I have a responsibility to learn
how to behave in ways others will find acceptable or even appealing.
If I can’t do something, and I want to be able to do it, I
feel it’s my right to ask for help. At the
same time, I recognize that society must be there with the tools to fulfill its
part of the bargain.
Not everyone wants help with disability and suffering, and I
support their right to exist and be accepted just as they are.
The point here is that there are many ways autistic people
can choose to live their (our) lives and all are valid and deserving of
respect. Some people want a little help,
while others face major challenges. They (and their families) feel great anger
and frustration over society’s weak response to their cries for help. As a progressive society I argue that it is
our duty to develop ways to meet the very diverse range of needs our community
has.
Mrs. Wright’s op-ed articulates a view of the “autism
situation” that is very different from my own.
She says things I would never say to people with autism and cannot in
good conscience stand by. Given her role as leader of the organization, I am
afraid it is my signal to exit the Autism Speaks stage.
I share with you the following letter, just delivered to Liz
Feld, president of Autism Speaks.
For the past four years I have worked very hard to defend
Autism Speak after a series of public relations missteps; beginning with the I
Am Autism video. The most recent “Autism
Speaks Point of View” http://www.autismspeaks.org/news/news-item/autism-speaks-washington-call-action
shows me that my words and efforts have had no real impact on the beliefs of
the actual leadership of the organization.
I have tried to help Autism Speaks staffers understand how
destructive its messages have been to the psyches of autistic people. We do not like hearing that we are defective
or diseased. We do not like hearing that
we are part of an epidemic. We are not
problems for our parents or society, or genes to be eliminated. We are people.
We do have problems, and we need help. Some of us need
counseling or training, while others have significant medical challenges. We
also need acceptance, and support. There
is a great diversity in our community, which means we have a very broad range
of needs. Unfortunately, the majority of the research Autism Speaks has funded
to date does not meet those needs, and the community services are too small a
percentage of total budget to be truly meaningful. We have delivered very little value to
autistic people, for the many millions raised.
I stayed on board because I felt the fundraising power of
Autism Speaks could be directed toward research and services that would be
truly beneficial to people living with autism today. I felt the occasional public relations gaffe
was tolerable if we began delivering therapies that would really help our
community. I expressed my views to that
effect in public, at science reviews, and to Autism Speaks staff.
One of the things I’ve said all along is that I believe
change is best accomplished from inside, through reasoned discussion. Recent public statements from Autism Speaks
have shown that my ideas have not taken hold among top leaders, despite my best
efforts.
This latest op-ed piece is simply not defensible for someone
who feels as I do, and I cannot continue to stand up for the public actions of
an organization that makes the same mistakes over and over again by failing to
connect to the community it purports to represent.
Autism Speaks says it’s the advocacy group for people with
autism and their families. It’s not,
despite having had many chances to become that voice. Autism Speaks is the only major medical or
mental health nonprofit whose legitimacy is constantly challenged by a large
percentage of the people affected by the condition they target.
The absence of people with autism in governing or oversight
roles has crippled Autism Speaks in its efforts to connect with the
community. Any group that hopes to be
accepted in service to autistic people must make autistic people its #1
priority, with no exceptions. The
priority cannot be autism parents, or autism grandparents. It’s got to be actual people with
autism.
No one says the Cancer Society does not speak for them. No one describes the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation as an evil organization. All
that and more is said of Autism Speaks every day. I’ve tried to be a voice of moderation but it
hasn’t worked. Too many of the views expressed by the organization are not my
own; indeed I hold very different points of view.
Autism Speaks still has a base of support among families of
young children, but it has very little support from parents of older kids, or
autistic adults. And the fact is, that
is the majority of the autistic population.
I’ve made that point in the past; apparently to no avail. I’ve suggested things the organization could
do to garner support from those groups, but those suggestions have been
ignored.
Consequently, I have decided to resign from the Science and
Treatment Boards, which are my only formal connections to Autism Speaks. I’m sorry to take this step but I feel I’m
left with no choice.
Autism Speaks has a lot of potential with its media
presence, public name recognition, celebrity connections and fundraising
power. It could do a lot of good, if
directed differently. I
hope that happens one day.
If you want to talk about making meaningful changes within
the organization, giving people with autism a substantial voice in your
governance, and shifting your focus to one that would truly deliver on the
promise of the funds raised, I would be open to the discussion. Until then,
it’s time for me to bow out.
Best wishes
John Elder Robison
November 13, 2013
John Elder Robison is an autistic adult and advocate for people with neurological differences. He's the author of Look Me in the Eye, Be Different, Raising Cubby, and the forthcoming Switched On. He serves on the Interagency Autism Coordinating Committee of the US Dept of Health and Human Services and many other autism-related boards. He's co-founder of the TCS Auto Program (A school for teens with developmental challenges) and he’s the Neurodiversity Scholar in Residence at the College of William & Mary in Williamsburg, Virginia. The opinions expressed here are his own. There is no warranty expressed or implied. While reading this essay may give you food for thought, actually printing and eating it may make you sick.
Comments
Many blessings in all your efforts going forward.
Thanks,
Dena Gassner
Thank you for your efforts John. Your writing and perspectives have been so helpful and inspirational to many of us.
Like Karen, I stand with you 100%.
God's speed to you and your family.
I am sorry it came to this, but please know that we support you. Parents I know have turned away from Autism Speaks in droves, but we will always stand beside you.
Craig Evans
Founder - Autism Hangout (dotcom)
Thanks. You rock.
I applaud both your effort to reform a flawed organization and your decision to stop beating your head against the brick wall of its misguided positions.
I'm sure you will feel much better as soon as the headache goes away, and it sure is nice to have a united front.
Autism Speaks does not speak for me.
Being denied the voice of a powerful witness and advocate like yourself will hopefully help divert attention and funding away from them toward groups that better represent and serve the autistic community.
Being denied the voice of a powerful witness and advocate like yourself will hopefully help divert attention and funding away from them toward groups that better represent and serve the autistic community.
Kammy Kramer
But it does leave us with a huge question: what do we do about Autism Speaks, which seems to have the lion's share of power and money relative to autism and public policy? It's a scary thing to read what Ms. Wright has to say and to realize that it will represent "autism" to Congress and anyone with money and power.
Any thoughts about how to take up the banner of diversity within the spectrum? I'd be glad to be a part of a movement AWAY from AS and TOWARD something that supports and engages people on the spectrum!
Lisa Jo Rudy
Because the picture she paints after each "This is autism," are experiences that many parents have had to some degree. Not all, but many. And I can't fault her for bringing these realities to the forefront. If families can't talk about what really happens in the home, or their struggles, then the rest of the world will never understand.
But I agree, she leaves out the flip side of "This is autism," and all the people who are innovators, creators, and problem solvers. If the world only hears about the problems, then they will forever see autism as a problem that has to be "dealt" with.
In the big picture: your moving on is just that. You're going to fulfill some destiny that's you've been building the path toward since the book first came out. And that's okay. There has to be enough room on the world-wide table for all sorts of opinions. Keep going and doing good things.
― Peter F. Drucker
Here's your chance!
Perla Messina
Chairperson
Greek Association of Autistic Asperger and HFA Adults
Athens, Greece
www.aspergerhellas.org
Thank you for moving forward without them.
A courageous act does not go unnoticed. Thank you for speaking your heart.
I am always thrilled to hear of the many new and emerging ways you are connected to the Autism movement, in addition to the powerful work you have already done through writing, speaking and innovating programs. Great that you are involved in government committees and groups to broaden and deepen understanding of Autism and advocate for innovative health policy changes.
Best regards!
Bev Leroux
I really appreciate your approach; Autism Speaks does not deserve to have your support.
You are the BEST!!!!
Julia Peterson
Autism Speaks irritates me, as do the "it must be vaccines" people. I am sick of everyone looking for something to blame. Work with your children and what you have -- you cannot change the past. Change their futures. Work toward making more therapies and support services affordable. THAT is what is needed.
I look forward to your next book. You are a role model for my children and myself. Thank you for all you do.
Marilyn, mom to Aspie Twins
(Yeah, not a fan of DSM 5 either).
Autism Speaks irritates me, as do the "it must be vaccines" people. I am sick of everyone looking for something to blame. Work with your children and what you have -- you cannot change the past. Change their futures. Work toward making more therapies and support services affordable. THAT is what is needed.
I look forward to your next book. You are a role model for my children and myself. Thank you for all you do.
Marilyn, mom to Aspie Twins
(Yeah, not a fan of DSM 5 either).
Like you, I also believe that working from within is one of the most effective ways to cause change, which is what I have been trying to do. I believe that, for the time being at least, I am going to continue to do just that, because I don't want to give up hope yet. It's a long and difficult process, but one that I feel is necessary for this organization to make any sort of real progress, which I believe it has made already just in the past few years. But still, there is a way to go.
Thank you for your candor and for writing this. I know we don't get to speak often, but I hope we might be able to start corresponding again one of these days. Hope you are doing well, sir.
I am glad that you resigned from Autism Speaks. Now I understand why you were with that organization. Autism Speaks will never listen to us. They are like the Europeans who carved up Africa in Berlin in the 1880s without a single African present. Bravo for quitting! Meow.
Xenia Grant
I am glad that you resigned from Autism Speaks. Now I understand why you were with that organization. Autism Speaks will never listen to us. They are like the Europeans who carved up Africa in Berlin in the 1880s without a single African present. Bravo for quitting! Meow.
Xenia Grant
I really hope your remarks will find their way to and be heard by so many of the celebrities who blindly jump on the AS bandwagon. Maybe they'll finally wake upto the fact that what AS stands for in no way stands for the Autism Community.
Thank you Mr.Robison. I appreciate what you tried to do. I will be sharing your blog post far and wide.
As I read the Op Ed, I did not immediately understand why you were so upset - because as a parent/care giver, I could relate to much of what she was saying. But then seeing your view on this made me realize that you are absolutely right! Advocacy is so much more than helping parents, grandparents and caregivers... it is also about helping those affected by the condition. My daughter is non-verbal, but if she could speak, I'm sure she would agree with you... there is more that can and should be done for the individuals with autism.
Thank you for this realization and for your past work with the organization. I hope some changes can be made and that they can work to advocate for everyone, and not just caregivers.
Thank you for doing your best to educate and drive change.
It is important to know autism is different. No one person with autism looks like another.
We need to help the ones with autism that need help, treatment and services - especially to keep them safe. And on the other end of the spectrum we need to enjoy the ones that need no help.
It is important to share perspectives. They are different.
Sincerely,
Lisa Ackerman @ TACA
Thank you for standing up for us!
Emily Boshkoff-Johnson
Research and Training Coordinator, Global Autism Project
Good on you John. You've made the right move. Now use the experience you've gained to build a better model.
Good luck, John, with your future! Look forward to seeing you again at another event in the Boston area
"I think that is the important criteria for distinguishing between individuals with severe, disabling autism and individuals with autism who are not overwhelmed by their sensitivities and who are attuned towards an inner balance of gift versus disability. I simply do not understand why Suzanne Wright did not specify which individuals with autism she was writing about."
Actually, I think the worst part of her message is how she talks about those who are the most challenged, like your son. I'd never minimize the disabilities he has or the time, energy, and money it takes to care for him. But surely you wouldn't say that he's "missing" or that his life isn't worth living. Surely you wouldn't say that his very existence is a burden and tore your family apart, or that all you do to support him isn't worth it. Autism Speaks is saying all of that in the letter. They claim that the existence of people like him is a crisis. They're denigrating the less disabled people on the spectrum by comparing them to people like him. I think when John criticizes Autism Speaks, he's defending the most severely disabled people on the spectrum, too.
I have a sneaking suspicion, though, that our mutual friend Dena Gassner is wrong, also above, about your voice becoming silent as a result of leaving Autism Speaks ;-).
In fact (and in response to Lisa Jo Rudy's question, also above), there is much work to be done, having seized the day: it is time for us all to reach out to the politicians and the advertisers who support Autism Speaks to persuade them to invest in other autism organizations that include autistic people in their governance and have fundraising and spending priorities that respect and better serve the actual needs of autistic people and of the local communities from which they raise funds -- and to serve notice that if they do not, we will cease to support them and urge others to join us in doing so. All the more so for those of us, like you, John, who have high public visibility and wide readership, in print and on the Internet.
Welcome back to the movement.
Tracey in Seoul, South Korea
I support you 100%. I have never supported Autism Speaks, because I have never seen its affect, reach, money or supposed power in any Autism Community I have been a part of. Nothing they have done with their millions have impacted my children, nieces or nephews with Autism. It has in fact hurt them. When Autism Speaks come to town with a fundraiser, it takes local money from local fundraisers. I have never supported an Autism Speaks walk, because they end up replacing our local Autism walks, and money spent in our community.
I honor your decision and am happy to see you take this stance.
I support you 100%. I have never supported Autism Speaks, because I have never seen its affect, reach, money or supposed power in any Autism Community I have been a part of. Nothing they have done with their millions have impacted my children, nieces or nephews with Autism. It has in fact hurt them. When Autism Speaks come to town with a fundraiser, it takes local money from local fundraisers. I have never supported an Autism Speaks walk, because they end up replacing our local Autism walks, and money spent in our community.
I honor your decision and am happy to see you take this stance.
And sorry if I called you a traitor in one of my blog posts for having joined Autism Speaks, but it is good to know that you have seen the innate evil in that bigoted organization.
We hope to hear from you more soon.
I respected your attempt to change Autism Speaks from within, and now I respect your willingness to walk away now when it became clear that you weren't succeeding. Above all, I respect your writing publicly about your disagreement with them.
In short, I respect you.
Thank you for all that you've done.
"We" are the high functioning that can understand words and emotions,"We" are not the ones that rely upon the state and the good intentions of others,"We" are not the ones with little language and no bodily function control, "We" are not problems for our parents or society because "We" aren't autistic.
As someone that led this ND movement before anyone commenting here or writing on this blog had ever heard of it and has since renounced it, Mr. Robinson does not speak for me nor the millions of others. There is no WE in autism. There is only I.
That work has covered GI issues, genetic problems leading to intellectual disability, sleep problems, panic, executive function, language . . . the list goes on.
I have talked a lot about our responsibility as a society to find ways to relieve the many ways autism can disable a person. We have a duty to develop and make available a range of therapies that's broad enough that autistic people with very different needs can have those needs met.
My issue is one of respect. I believe autistic people - however we feel about being autistic - deserve to be treated with respect and we deserve freedom to live our lives as we choose with best potential for success.
It still bugs me more that they are misleading about what they do than that what they do is try to eliminate me and people like me from humanity's future. I can deal with people hating me and wanting me never to have existed, but it really bugs me when they say things which are incorrect.
In this case, with respect to word choices, it is you who are misinformed or incorrect
If you would like to learn more I refer you to the IACC reports on autism. They summarize current knowledge as updated annually by our Federal committee.
Thanks for your thoughts and best wishes.
We caretakers are exhausted and tired, and the systems of care do not adequately alleviate what we have to deal with every day every week every month every year every decade. I agree with many of the criticisms about Autism Speaks regarding the $$$- but anyone that understands autism completely has to acknowledge that it is NOT an EASY or wonderful gift for everyone dealing with it.
Your thoughtful answer makes clear that this is a community where the affected individuals and parents often have very different support needs and should probably be represented by different groups, or different divisions within a arguer group.
Something like the relationship between AA and ALANON I suppose.
I often see people with autism as having views that are sharply opposed to the views of their parents, and in some cases parents have been very offended when that is pointed out. Yet it's not an attack on parents; simply an observation that kids (autistic or not) cannot be excepted to agree with all parental choices regarding their care
Perhaps Autism Speaks should really be Autism Parents Speak. Certainly, if they made that choice, it would make their role clearer but who am I to say?
What we need is a description of various organizations who are focused on support, research, and whatnot across the spectrum.
Maybe trying to change AS is not the right goal.
If they mismanage $$$ that seems to be a big issue. If they say they represent the entire spectrum, but they do not, that is an issue.
But if they are focused on one segment of Autism, then they should be free to focus on that and allow other organizations to help the other parts of the spectrum that need their help.
It sounds like they may not be trying to speak for those with Asperger's Syndrome or other less severe manifestations of Autism.
I am still new to this, and see this as an opportunity for clarity and providing direction.
http://reversethestigma.blogspot.com/
Bob Titus
Former Director of Public Policy
for Autism NJ (COSAC)
Maureen Casile
mcasile.com
Autism Speaks is not the same as the IACC as Kulp tried to state, and I think you know that as well. So I certainly don't expect you to resign from that.
Keep up the good fight, mate!
I live each day with full knowledge as witness to my son's absolute gifts to this world. It is more our challenge as a society to embrace and not destroy those who embody the gifts. Yes, Suzanne Wright described many of my days, and seasons - but John described the way forward for my family.
Your metaphor of fire has to be the most powerful I have read in the last ten years. Thank you.
JoAnn
Actually, they do, in different words:
http://youtu.be/3QPZfcYTUaA
I pray that one day that Autism Speaks will be exposed the way the Susan G. Komen for the Cure organization has been.
There needs to be major changes in the way health care operates in our country. John's decision is a big step in the right direction.
Feels good.
When I co-authored “Chicken Soup for the Soul, Children with Special Needs” with Jack Canfield, Mark Victor Hansen and Heather McNamara, the biggest dilemma we faced was what to call the book ,as folks both did and did not want to be labeled in certain ways. It was reported to be the most challenging title the Chicken Soup people wrestled with to date. What we learned was that people on the autism spectrum and other spectrums for that matter, are people first before their condition!
Some of my favorite people are on the autism spectrum! My dad, my son, Stephen Shore, my sister (maybe) and even a bit of me! When my son was diagnosed in 1992 I embraced his autism and mostly tried to focus on his gifts, strengths and talents rather than the deficits he displayed at the time, after I got over the initial denial of it all. Of course I had the same challenges families face in those beginning years and could have chosen to have a negative attitude and chose instead to focus on the positives as much as I could. As part of his early intervention, before the days of behavioral interventions, I wasn’t about to wait around for science to prove to me whether certain methodologies were legit or not. I just wanted to find tools that would enable him to have the best life he could have.
Of course I used my own “mom” common sense compass, built into most moms, though I tried things to help my son that were not necessarily science based. They were “mom” based. My real question is who are we to “fix” people? All people are broken in some way, and to different degrees. ALL people have different ways of being though certainly no one is “better” than the next person. If we feel with our hearts and souls while helping people through tough times, in whatever way makes sense at the time, the world will be a better place!
Our time on the planet is all-together too short to waste on efforts that take an extraordinary amount of time to prove one way or the other. Often, by the time double blind studies are concluded, methodologies have changed. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a Polyanna, with an altruistic view, and I do believe in research with a true return on investment. I propose that we focus to create a better overall society that promotes everybody flourishing.
Autism is not a disease, an illness or a disorder, it’s a different order and people on the spectrum as well as other spectrums, are wonderful souls and deserve the best, most successful lives, whatever that might look like. Thanks for being you, John!
Karen Simmons
CEO, AUTISM TODAY
I can't possibly thank you enough for acting on your thoughts.
Donna Downing
Autism National Committee
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