Neurodiversity, Disability, and Exceptionality
This six minute video of my convocation talk at Landmark College really encapsulates my thinking on neurodiversity.
We can have disability diagnoses, but we do not have to live as disabled people, thereby internalizing the idea we are "less" than others. We can choose to live as neurodivergent people - using a term that springs from our own community - and recognize each of us has a mix of disability and exceptionality.
Watch the video and tell me what you think:
John Elder Robison
Comments
"When people say to you have ADHD or autism, what they are often thinking is: You are messed up, and you won’t amount to anything. That’s the stigma we talk about, right there in those people’s minds. "
Or, how about:
"When people say to you have X or Y, what they are often thinking is, You are messed up, and you won't amount to anything. That's the stigma we talk about, right there in those people's minds."
It is unreasonable for anyone to think they will not be stigmatized by some/most other people, some/most of the time. Call it the "human condition". This reminds me of the old childhood song: "Nobody like us, everybody hates us, think we'll go eat worms!"