Should Autism Awareness week be more than baking cakes ...?

The week commencing 27 March is the designated 'Autism Awareness Week'.

Looking at the NAS articles, it seems to be all about fundraising, about baking cakes, going for a walk or holding a sponsored event.  All very worthy, I am sure.

But aren't we missing something really important.  The slogan is 'until everyone understands'.  And what will everyone understand about autism if we just bake cakes or go for a walk?  That there is a condition called 'autism'.  That those who are autistic can bake cakes?

'Autism awareness week' should surely be an opportunity we should all use to state our case.  Anyone who has been touched by autism, from parents and carers, relations, and those who are autistic themselves - should get involved in awareness where it really counts.

And that is by contacting the newspapers, writing letters to the media, writing to our MPs, lobbying parliament, writing to local councillors, and organising campaigns where the real issues relating to autism are stated.  Issues such as lack of available diagnoses for adults, the waiting time for a diagnosis, the real lack of anything having been done under the 'Autism Strategy', the fact that NHS trusts do not offer any help at all to adults who may be on the spectrum.  Many MPs are on Twitter and Facebook, we could message and tweet them.  Get the broadcasters, local radio especially, interested in our cause.  Write an article or letter for the local newspaper on the difficulties we face in everyday life, barriers put up not by us but by the attitude of others.  This is surely as important as any amount of fundraising in raising awareness.

Daily I see discussions on this forum about problems autistic people and their carers are having with authority, funds being cut, barrers put in our way.  And if we also let a wide audience know of these difficulties some of this may just begin to make others understand.  Some seed may fall on stony ground, but if we all did communicate our issues to the media, our lawmakers, our local councillors then maybe, just maybe, we would begin to open a few doors in the barriers that are put in our way.

But how many of us will do this?

Parents
  • With Autism Week/Day, wouldn't it be nice if all these local/national government and employers had a pop-up marketplace with information on the condition.  It could also have some individuals who are happy to demonstrate their strengths together with some issues with NT's.  There is so much about cakes for this, dress up for that and exercise for the next thing.  

    Why can't we be different in bringing the world along with us, like PRIIDE, to become more visible/awareness.  

    I watched Victoria Derbyshire this morning and found it ridiculous that some are being locked up and because they are having meltdown's then they are put on medication (they did not need it before they were locked up) to supposedly help them.  Their anxiety should be addressed by understanding not sectioning!!!  Just shows how mental health awareness is ignored by those that should know better.

  • Before I was diagnosed, because of stress, anxiety and depression, I was put on anti depressants.  I was not happy with it.  And my employers Occupational Health department wanted my GP to considerably increase the dose.  Needless to say I did not take that advice.

    Anti depressants do nothing to address the cause of the problem.  They just make it so you couldn't care less.  Addressing the cause of problems in autism is really what should be done, and the problems would then soon diminish and disappear.  But the thinking with medics is that if some pill or other is available then it should be used.  And look what that thinking has now done in other areas such as antibiotics where they have become increasingly ineffective.  Over or unnecessary prescribing of antidepressants causes addiction and ever increasing doses. 

    But it is just easier for a doctor to give out tablets or inject sedatives than it is to find the real cause of the problem.

Reply
  • Before I was diagnosed, because of stress, anxiety and depression, I was put on anti depressants.  I was not happy with it.  And my employers Occupational Health department wanted my GP to considerably increase the dose.  Needless to say I did not take that advice.

    Anti depressants do nothing to address the cause of the problem.  They just make it so you couldn't care less.  Addressing the cause of problems in autism is really what should be done, and the problems would then soon diminish and disappear.  But the thinking with medics is that if some pill or other is available then it should be used.  And look what that thinking has now done in other areas such as antibiotics where they have become increasingly ineffective.  Over or unnecessary prescribing of antidepressants causes addiction and ever increasing doses. 

    But it is just easier for a doctor to give out tablets or inject sedatives than it is to find the real cause of the problem.

Children
  • Agreed.  There's money in meds, of course.  Tons and tons of it.  Easier and more profitable to cosh us back into insensible compliance, and maybe 'passable assimilation'.

    I take no meds at all now.  And now that I'm committed to a course of counselling, I'm also committing to stopping self-medication.  I've a feeling it won't always be easy. I've stipulated to the counsellor that I'm not interested in any form of 'corrective therapy'.  I've think I've had enough damage from that.