Stories
Stories matter. They help us all to know that others have walked the same path, and we should all have the right to say who we are. People on the autistic spectrum and their parents, siblings or teachers are warmly invited to for publication here. Read More.
Thoughts
Finding out
Working from estimates that one in every 150 of us resides on the autistic spectrum, I have just discovered, with the Statistics NZ population clock as my guide, the possibility that 27,910 people in New Zealand currently experience life from this perspective.
Added to this group are those who are trying to understand what a position […]
Stories: Alyson Bradley
Aspergers syndrome? You may well ask. I did not think or even know about it until recently. I’m in my 40s and have just been diagnosed with Aspergers syndrome. I also found out I’m dyslexic.
Apparently, often people with Aspergers will have other learning difficulties. Dyslexia alone would be bad enough (but I think about 10 […]
The Evidence-Based Guideline for Autism Spectrum Disorder
The development of the Evidence-Based Guideline for Autism Spectrum Disorder is a significant cross-government project. The Guideline will be for anyone supporting or working with a people with autism, such as professionals or family members, who will be guided by what is known as ‘best practice’ according to internationally peer reviewed research. For those with […]
And now …
Anyone who was at the launch of A Perfect World on Monday night will tell you that “Billy Glish” — David Cohen’s old school friend Bill English — gave a soulful and eloquent speech about the challenges faced by families for whom autism is a daily reality. His observation that the book gave lie to […]
Welcome to humans
Welcome to humans*.
I first heard of Asperger Syndrome in 1995. The last line in an educational psychologist’s report on our older son, Jimmy — who, according to his kindergarten teachers, seemed to have “trouble processing information” — read “ADD or AS”.
I knew what ADD was, and I knew that wasn’t Jimmy. But “AS”?
“Asperger Syndrome,” said […]
