
Autism Treatment Trust
Registered Charity Number SCO033523


Design: LA/ATT




Much work still needs to be done in autism. This should begin with understanding the health issues that are associated with this condition. But it must go further to include freely available, suitable educational provisions and support structures for the inclusion and well being of adults. Underpinning this, governmental and human right regulations need strengthening.
Importantly, independence, choice, inclusion, valuing people implies a true and fundamental respect of people with autism. Trivial and simple but essentially important are the attitudes we have towards them and their condition. We all carry these within ourselves, consciously and subconsciously, but they can be changed to the positive benefit of the people with autism and their families.
Attitudes towards autism
The most commonly encountered attitudes seen are discomfort and rejection, making
it invisible. The reasons for this may be very diverse, but are likely entrenched
in our deepest evolutionary make-
Attitudes can be modulated
The knowledge we have gained in recent years of autism, thanks particularly to growing numbers of reports made by individuals with autism, their families and advocates, have helped the general population to understand this condition better. Behaviours which were incomprehensible, such as sudden bursts of distress, various forms of repetitive behaviour, misunderstanding of people’s intentions, or alternative learning processes, are now becoming understandable.
There is no unique way of learning, seeing the world, interacting with the environment and people. Most advances in science, art, philosophy and even in the specific understanding of relationships, one of the core difficulties seen in autism, often emanates from people who have the gifts to think outside the general modalities of analysis and interpretation, who have the determination and perseverance to pursue unpopular ideas, who have a different clarity of mind and understanding because their perception and attention to parameters, their form of learning are different. These are all attributes commonly seen in autism. Why shouldn’t the general population embrace this diversity?
This increased knowledge has also helped the general population to challenge the
notion of normality, and to see that most neuro-
Posautism
Being sincerely positive about autism helps reducing stress and likeliness of depression,
helps communication, helps inclusion. This is the place where we begin when we meet
a person with autism for the first time. A sincere attitude of acceptance, a sincere
desire to learn about that person, to make the time together non-
Article of Interest: Yeah I’m autistic, you got a problem with that?



