Monday, December 17, 2012
A Few Words About Autism and Anger
I talked a little bit about this on Facebook yesterday so I apologize to those of you who follow me on both but I feel like I can elaborate a little more here than on Facebook.
We are all devastated by the events that transpired Friday in Connecticut. Those of us who are educators, and parents, and have children with special needs are hit numerous times with the similarities between what unfolded for those children, those parents, those educators on that fatal day. As a teacher, I've already expressed on this blog how empathetic I feel for those noble educators who guarded their children, some of them to the last. As a parent, I feel overwhelmed and terrified at the consideration that this could happen to my children. As a parent of child who was once believed to be autistic, however, I have to also look at the implications that this event may have on children like mine, particularly concerning some of the labels that are being thrown around the media.
Well meaning relatives, citizens of Newtown, even reporters, are talking about how it is possible that the killer was autistic. I don't know if anyone has purposely implied that those two words go together but, I assure you, THEY DO NOT. Nor do the words autism and mental illness. They are not synonyms. They cannot and should not be used interchangeably. If we begin to use them in the same context, the implications could be detrimental to an entire group of children who need our help, not our revocation. It is extremely important that those of us who understand this continue to speak out and correct people who are making assumptions or who are perpetrating stereotypes through ignorance, and by ignorance I mean literally "not understanding", not "stupidity".
Ultimately, mental illness reform should be one of the results of this terrific tragedy. If we are to move in that direction, we must band together and ask ourselves, "What can I do to help this cause?" I am not sure exactly what I can do at this point but I am looking for ways that I can help. I hope this blog will help in some regard. If it helps one person to understand why they should never even imply that a person with autism is mentally ill or is capable of violence solely because they are autistic, then it has helped a little. I would like to do more. Suggestions are welcome!
While I am hoping to clarify that autism does not make one violent in and of itself, neither am I implying that persons with autism don't get angry, can't be violent, never suffer from mental illness. Of course they, like anyone else, could potentially fall in to more than one categories. But autism by itself is not what made this man commit these crimes. Let's be very careful never to imply that it was autism that made him do this. If you hear someone do so, please correct them.
If you are looking for more information about characteristics of autism, please visit:
www.autismspeaks.org/what-autism
That's my two cents. I would love to hear yours. Thank you for visiting and please feel free to leave a comment below.
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When a tragedy of this magnitude occurs, people always want to point a finger at the "reason, or root cause". I think it's human nature to try and find someone, or something to blame. This scapegoatism, is wrong.
ReplyDeleteThe fact is, this guy may have had some sort of disorder whether it be autism, aspergers, adhd, or whether the guy was mentally ill.
Millions of people are afflicted with the above and they live life to their potential as good and loving people.
What caused this guy to kill is none of these things. What caused him to do such a horrible act of violence is the same thing that has always caused man to kill another man, evil.
Evil is why Cain killed Abel, Charles Manson is evil, Adolf Hitler, Timothy McVeigh.... These are are people who made the choice to take someone else's life, unfortunately, it is a choice built into our makeup as mankind. God gave us the ability to choose our path, to make choices that not only affect us, but sadly in cases like these, affect innocent people who are simply making their choices to live a decent life.
I don't know how you control this. It has always been around. I know removing God from schools and other public settings is probably not helping people choose the correct path. True good and true evil cannot coexist in one's mind. Remove the true good, and the door is wide open for the alternative. Welcome to modern America.
Very well said. Thank you for your comment!
ReplyDeleteIt is yet again the middle of the night and my daughter finally fell asleep on my lap...I don't want to move her yet and so I grabbed my phone and read your message to me. I am so proud of you, your voice needs to be heard and your knowledge has the potential to help so many, (our chat has given me strength and I think of you often.) As a teacher and a Mom I am broken by the Newtown terror but am shocked by the fallout that seems to be pointing a figure at aspergers and autism. Kids on the spectrum have more to deal with daily than, "Normal,"people can imagine but violence is not something that is associated usually. We have a variety of diagnosis for our daughter and when she turns two in Jan. I'm sure that the autism spectrum will re-surface. What I do know is that she is the kindest little person I have ever met and the kids on the spectrum that I have taught are full of love. This kid was something that most if us cannot understand but I feel strongly that his spot on the a spec had nothing to do with the horrors he did. It's not easy being a special needs parent but
ReplyDeleteHey friend! I'm so sorry I didn't see this until just now. You got cut-off, too, at least on my end. But from what I read, it just reiterates to me what an amazing person you are and how lucky that sweet girl is that you are her mom. Thank you for your support! Love you and that precious girl so much!
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