Neurodiversity Quotes

Quotes tagged as "neurodiversity" Showing 1-30 of 54
Anna Whateley
“My room is the safest place my body has. My mind doesn’t really have a safe place.”
Anna Whateley

Annie Kotowicz
“There are billions of us -- humans everywhere, with access to our own minds and no one else's, tossing one another songs and sentences to bridge the gap.”
Annie Kotowicz, What I Mean When I Say I'm Autistic: Unpuzzling a Life on the Autism Spectrum

“By the time I entered education in the late 1980s, schools were about as well adapted for my neurotype as a set of stairs is adapted for the use by a Dalek.”
Pete Wharmby, Untypical: How the World Isn’t Built for Autistic People and What We Should All Do About it

“People who are not autistic tell themselves stories. They fill in the gaps of the people they meet, often with information that isn't correct. It's why they like horror so much. It's why they get so easily scared. They see a ghost and the ghost doesn't need to do a thing. They will complete the story, they will scare themselves.”
Elle McNicoll, Keedie

Carol Cujec
“My ears work. My brain understands. Can't you see I am a REAL PERSON?”
Carol Cujec, Real

Devon  Price
“Therapy that is focused on battling “irrational beliefs,” such as cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), doesn’t work as well on Autistic people as it does on neurotypicals. One reason for that is many of the fears and inhibitions of Autistic people are often entirely reasonable, and rooted in a lifetime of painful experiences. We tend to be pretty rational people, and many of us are already inclined to analyze our thoughts and feelings very closely (sometimes excessively so). Autistics don’t need cognitive behavioral training to help us not be ruled by our emotions. In fact, most of us have been browbeaten into ignoring our feelings too much.”
Devon Price, Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity

Devon  Price
“It's not always possible (or helpful) to try to untangle which of a person's traits are Autistic and which are caused by the trauma of being neurodiverse in a neurotypical world.”
Devon Price, Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity

Jolene Stockman
“A diagnosis is not a prediction. It doesn’t tell you what’s possible. It doesn’t change you, your colleague, your child, or your friend. It just opens up tricks and tools to thrive.”
Jolene Stockman, Notes for Neuro Navigators: The Allies' Quick-Start Guide to Championing Neurodivergent Brains

Devon  Price
“When Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling published the piece" TERF Wars "on her blog in the summer of 2020, she specifically mentioned her fear that many transgender men are actually Autistic girls who weren't conventionally feminine, and have been influenced by transactivists on the internet into identifying out of womanhood. In presenting herself as defending disabled" girls, "she argued for restricting young trans Autistic people's ability to self-identity and access necessary services and health care.
Rowling's perspective (which she shares with many gender critical folks) is deeply dehumanising to both the trans and Autistic communities.”
Devon Price, Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity

Fabrizio Acanfora
“E' un meccanismo di sopravvivenza che chi è come me conosce anche troppo bene: quando si comincia a comprendere che la maggior parte dei problemi e degli ostacoli percepiti come insormontabili sono il risultato di una dissonanza tra sé e il resto del mondo, nella maggior parte dei casi si comincia a imitare gli altri, a conformarsi.
Nell'autismo questo tentativo frequente di conformità al gruppo di appartenenza viene definito masking, indossare una maschera che copre interamente il volto. Col tempo ne crei una per il lavoro, un'altra per le uscite con gli amici, una per le relazioni affettive. Osservi quello che fanno gli altri, cerchi di imitarne i comportamenti, quel modo di ridere a battute che a te sembrano insignificanti, oppure l'andatura, la prosodia. Ma il discorso vale anche se da adolescente scopri che invece delle ragazze ti piacciono i compagni di scuola, quegli stessi ragazzi che invece manifestano la loro eterosessualità con esuberanza spesso facendo in tua presenza commenti terribili contro chiunque abbia un orientamento differente dal loro.
Indossi la maschera se percepisci il tuo genere diverso da quel lo che la società si aspetta tu debba sentire, oppure se non se felice della vita che hai. Quando sei con gli altri, sei gli altri.
Poi torni nella solitudine della tua camera e a volte quella maschera si è talmente appiccicata sul tuo volto che non viene via del tutto; col tempo nemmeno ricordi più chi sei, cosa ti faceva emozionare.”
Fabrizio Acanfora, In altre parole. Dizionario minimo di diversità

Abhijit Naskar
“My pronoun is people,
I'm divergent, yet invincible.
I am straight, I am queer;
I am civilian, I am seer.
Spirit of life, I - am universal!

Call me disabled or differently able,
Call me collective or individual.
Fleshly forms I've got plenty,
All run by same love and liberty -
Culture supreme is inclusion.”
Abhijit Naskar, Yaralardan Yangın Doğar: Explorers of Night are Emperors of Dawn

Jolene Stockman
“As an individual, as a person with the power to affect other people with your words, actions, and expressions every single day, you can give people who see the world differently the gift of accepting who and how they are.”
Jolene Stockman, Notes for Neuro Navigators: The Allies' Quick-Start Guide to Championing Neurodivergent Brains

Emilie Pine
“I like that I have ten things on the go, all at once. I like that I'm always planning for the next thing. I like that I bring a high energy to my life, that I see it as a challenge. I like that my favourite thing to do on the flight home is to look at the airline route map to pick my next destination.”
Emilie Pine, Notes To Self

N.K. Jemisin
“I don’t want somebody who’s going to talk about me like I’m not here, or say things about one person when they really mean it about another person, or, or—”
N.K. Jemisin, The Awakened Kingdom

Victoria Costello
“The dead want what they want. Even an ocean away, there was no denying them.”
Victoria Costello, Orchid Child

Danielle Trussoni
“these changes to his way of experiencing reality were so strange that he didn't say anything about them at first. All he knew was he was experiencing highly-structured geometric hallucinations on regular basis, and while he knew what he saw was real, he wasn't sure anyone would believe him if he tried to explain it.." pp21”
Danielle Trussoni, The Puzzle Master

Nora Cenere
“Mi ritroverò accerchiato da persone che si chiedono a vicenda perché me ne stia in un angolo senza rivolgere parola a nessuno. Io mi sto divertendo ad ascoltare musica, anche se non è la stessa che sento quando sono solo; non è male stare accanto a persone nuove, è solo stancante. Ma il mio viso non si piega per dimostrarlo e le persone non mi credono quando dico la verità.”
Nora Cenere, La costellazione del cane

Temple Grandin
“A common source of disappointment and frustration for parents is the letdown that happens soon after diagnosis. Parents seek diagnostic evaluations both to better understand their child and also to have that child be eligile for services. Many, if not most, parents are not aware that it can take months to find and secure these resources and to get an actual appointment. Additionally, the cost of these services is often far greater than anticipated.
One parent, who participated in in-depth interviews by researchers interested in the partnership between parents and providers, had this to say, "It felt like you were being taken to the edge of a cliff. You've been given the diagnosis, you got shoved off the end, and then it was, 'Oh by the way, we haven't got the parachute. You'll need to get that for yourself.' You feel like you finally got there, and you're quite happy, you're ready to fly - but then all the sudden you don't have the rest of the equipment you need to fly with.”
temple grandin, Navigating Autism: 9 Mindsets For Helping Kids on the Spectrum

Devon  Price
“It's meaningless to question whether a trans Autistic person would have" still "been trans had they not been born neurodiverse, because Autism is such a core part of who we are. Without our disability (or our gender identity) we'd be entirely different people. There is no separating these aspects of ourselves from our personhood or personality. They're both core parts.”
Devon Price, Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity

Devon  Price
“Racism has permeated psychology and psychiatry from its genesis. Early clinicians came from white, European backgrounds, and used their culture's social norms as the basis for what being healthy looked like. It was a very narrow and oppressive definition, which assumed that being genteel, well-dressed, well-read, and white were the marks of humanity, and that anyone who deviated from that standard was not a person, but an animal in need of being tamed.”
Devon Price, Unmasking Autism: Discovering the New Faces of Neurodiversity

Fabrizio Acanfora
“Quando ho capito che le differenze che vedevo nascere in me rappresentavano (incomprensibilmente) solo problemi, ho deciso che forse sarebbe stato più saggio non mostrarle al mondo. Con grande dolore, perché erano parte di me.
È proprio lì che è nata l'ambivalenza del mio sentimento verso l'idea di diversità: da un lato l'ho sempre considerata come la cosa più naturale del mondo, siamo tuttə diversə, le differenze sono quello che rendono il mondo un posto in cui valga la pena vivere e per questo vanno tutelate e rispettate. D'altra parte ho cominciato a soffrire al pensiero che proprio questa varietà, questa idea così complessa e quasi indefinibile, dovesse essere a sua volta infilata in una categoria e, secondo i metodi utilizzati per definire la normalità, suddivisa in tante altre piccole categorie.
Oggi so che questa mia insofferenza verso la tassonomizzazione della diversità nelle sue molteplici espressioni ha a che fare con la convinzione - che fino a poco tempo fa era un'idea senza nome - che la diversità sia intersezionale; non mi è mai piaciuto dover definire la diversità solo in quanto opposta alla normalità, perché utilizzando questo sistema sarà sempre qualcosa di inferiore. Se non siamo in grado di definire la diversità come un concetto autonomo e non necessariamente come contrario di normalità, non riusciremo a liberarla dallo stigma sociale. Altrimenti l'inclusione resterà sempre un processo che parte dalla normalità - percepita come la cosa giusta - e investe una diversità tutto sommato passiva, desiderosa di entrare a far parte del club delle persone sane, normali, di quelle che non vengono additate come difettose o strane. È questa l'idea di diversità che non mi piace, una diversità dipendente dall'idea di una normalità che, paradossalmente, è inesistente in natura.”
Fabrizio Acanfora, In altre parole. Dizionario minimo di diversità

Fabrizio Acanfora
“E si rimane per sempre quello che, a un dato momento, si è deciso che dovevi essere. Non c'è rielaborazione possibile: le persone devono essere ben catalogate, marchiate a vita.
Almeno, però, fatemi un favore: non venitemi a dire che non è possibile; perché il dolore, la solitudine, la difficoltà nel sentirmi diverso da voi, li ho portati dentro da solo, quasi sempre in silenzio. La fatica di sembrare normale in modo che voi poteste stare tranquilli, l'ho fatta da solo.
Adesso sono stanco, mi sono reso conto che non c'è bisogno di vergognarsi, nel sentirsi diverso. Ora ho deciso che io, tutto sommato, a questa normalità che distrugge il pianeta in cui vive, che odia chiunque manifesti delle differenze; a questa normalità che tenta di annientare il pensiero critico e aspira a una beata mediocrità, non voglio più assomigliarci.”
Fabrizio Acanfora, Eccentrico: Autismo e Asperger in un saggio autobiografico

“An adulthood diagnosis of ADHD can be, among other things, physically dizzying, and that I once feared 'never beginning to live’ now feels completely legitimate. However, I am learning that my fear was borne of the assumption that ‘truly living’ is something ‘other’ than what I experience, and it isn’t.’
- Katy Fraser, Talking in Diamonds”
Katy Fraser, Talking in Diamonds

“Identifying as neurodivergent isn't just another label; it's also an identity, it's a reclamation, it's a song. When we call ourselves neurodivergent, we are reclaiming our differences that society calls abnormal or wrong. When we call ourselves neurodivergent, we are challenging you to consider what 'normal' actually means and perhaps even realize that maybe our normal isn't your normal. When we call ourselves neurodivergent, we are rejecting the concept of disorders.”
Sonny Jane Wise, We're All Neurodiverse

Jeff Beamish
“What is madness if not everything that science has not yet managed to prove?”
Jeff Beamish, No, You're Crazy

“Actually, the more I think about it, the more I figure that a lot of the cons of autism are not really caused by autism, but by how other people react to it.”
Libby Scott, Can You See Me?

“We are acceptable humans as is, not once we stop having ADHD. You do not need to be fixed because you are not a broken version of normal.”
Jessica McCabe, How to ADHD: An Insider's Guide to Working with Your Brain

“NeuroDiversity is the next frontier in Diversity & Inclusion. If your D&I program doesn't take all NeuroDivergent people into account, it's already obsolete.”
Lyric Rivera, Workplace NeuroDiversity Rising: NeuroDiversity = ALL Brains NeuroDivergent and NeuroTypical working together & supporting each other

“But it isn't easy to kick the culture fit habit. It's slippery and has many faces. In Chapter 8, we will cover a range of prevalent cognitive biases that obstruct attempts to embrace diversity of all kinds, and culture fit wears most of them in one form or another among its disguises.”
Dr. Maureen Dunne, Author, The Neurodiversity Edge

“Given what we now understand about the fundamental processes underlying AI, you can't get out of Flatland by simply building an infinite number of two-dimensional ladders infinitely fast. They will move faster and more competently within the boundaries of linear rationality than any human is capable of. But they will always be bound within the confines of that map.”
Dr. Maureen Dunne, Author, The Neurodiversity Edge

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