The first part is in my "native language," and then the second part provides a translation, or at least an explanation. This is not a look-at-the-autie gawking freakshow as much as it is a statement about what gets considered thought, intelligence, personhood, language, and communication, and what does not.
My all-purpose answer to the question "If you can do such-and-such, why can't you do this other thing?" A question that many neurologically unusual people of all sorts get a lot of the time. The target audience has a relatively typical range of hearing and color perception. The video itself is mostly text and spoken words, but there's other things
Dave Spicer's analogy of autistic people to different kinds of unusual rocks. (He wrote the words, I did the video. Used his words with his written permission.)
This is the first part of a three-part interview with a 49-year-old autistic woman about the concept of autism recovery. She discusses the great improvement in her ability to speak since childhood, and then whether or not she believes this means she is recovered from autism. This is only part 1 of 3, so please watch the other two videos as well in order for this to make sense.
A video response to "My Synesthete Samples" by KittiesRock46. Shows my colored letters and numbers and a bit of an explanation of the broader concept of synaesthesia. In other words, yet another synaesthete goofing off.
This is a reply to the "articles of understanding" exchanged between Autism Speaks and GRASP, in which both sides pretty much ignored the existence of autistic self-advocates who do not speak and do not want to be cured, reducing us to old cliches. It primarily addresses the assumptions made by Alison Tepper Singer in her article and some of her other work.
This is the second part of a three-part interview with a 49-year-old autistic woman about the concept of autism recovery. She discusses the dangers inherent in considering herself recovered, and how autistic people's skills are viewed in general. This is part 2 of 3, so please watch the other two videos as well in order for this to make sense. (You might want to start with part 1.)
A response to "Exuberance" by ShinyMetalBrain. The happy dance I always want to do when I'm in a really good mood. And how I couldn't be trained out of it by a guy determined to pathologize it. And yes this was filmed while IN that flappy/bouncy sort of mood.
Starting a meme for people to post happy dances in response to. And showing a dog happy dance. (See my other happy dance video for my own happy dance, and see shinymetalbrain's "Exuberance" for hers.)
As requested by blog readers, my cat meets my single-antenna theremin. Captioned, although there's no words in it, just varying tones based on how close the cat is to the theremin.
Now Is The Time To Save For Retirement - News Channel 2000 People turning 50 today are beginning to view that milestone as a time of enjoying new-found freedom, of making new choices and dreaming new dreams. They approach life after 50 with more education, greater economic resources and diverse attitudes ...
How Should Retirees Plan For Their Kids? - Insurance News Net Copyright 2008 Gannett Company, Inc.All Rights Reserved USA TODAY July 25, 2008 Friday FIRST EDITION SECTION: MONEY; Pg. 4B LENGTH: 1534 words HEADLINE: How should retirees plan for their kids?; Want some advice? BYLINE: Christine Dugas Have ...
3 Retirement Myths - US News and World Report The conventional wisdom about retirement may be worth re-examining, say two financial-planning mavericks. In their recently published Spend 'til the End: the Revolutionary Guide to Raising Your Living Standard (Today and When You Retire) , Laurence ...
Long-Term Planning - GovExec.com In the seminars I conduct about retirement planning, the subject of long-term care insurance always seems to generate a fair amount of confusion.