The Autism Spectrum is a Behavioral Meme, Not a Mental Disability

in #autism7 years ago

source: Nature.com — Pete Ellis/drawwood.com

Technology has introduced new behavioral dynamics in our lives that often catch us by surprise. What is consider normal and what is not, is often nothing but a matter of perspective. Today, there is a thriving tendency for diagnosing children as autistic (and/or having Asperger's) if they just lack the social intuition to communicate with textbook normality. This is not a completely unscientific assumption but a damaging societal narrative.

For those not familiar with the term, the Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) encompasses such a wide range of subjective behavioral traits that pretty much anyone can fall within it's boundaries at any given time. The ASD implies that the individual has ongoing social problems such as difficulty communicating and interacting with others or engaging in repetitive behaviors. If one does not have many interests (whatever that means in their definition), then you can qualify as an autistic individual. having limited interests or engaging in just a few activities is also an indicator.

The tragic part is that the symptoms are typically recognized in the first two years of life — an age that is very much still in process and those who do the evaluation are anything but experts. They simply take a generic form and tick away boxes based on their own intuition and parents feedback. Keep in mind that the scientific research on autism is extremely vague and it can be hardly be called scientific. Not a single study has been falsified or replicated due to the fact that the definition itself is based on the rather shady "soft" science of psychology (I call it social engineering). To top all these, If the individual has a hard time functioning socially and forming relationships — whether in class, school or work — then this is the strongest evidence for having ASD.

Before I continue, I want you to pause for a moment and ponder upon a few important but rather inconvenient observations. We live in a society that is increasingly dominated by screen communication. Our public schools are pretty much brainwashing facilities for creating numbed wage-slave livestock. Due to the abundance of information and convenience in communication and entertainment, most people prefer to spend more time alone. Last but not least, communication, any way you examine it, incorporates deception and manipulation. We smile to people to like us. We use specific words to get what we want. We dress in order to attract. Every single thing we do incorporates a great level of sociopathy because life is based on deception. If children do not learn how to lie by the age of 4 then they are considered problematic. From the advertising boards we look every day to the fake greeting psychotic smile that is painted in our faces to make our way through the day — all this, is considered normal because everyone is doing it. That's the science behind a disorder. If you deviate from the center of the bell curve, then you have a problem. If that is not social engineering, I don't know what is.



If a child is not able to take part in our cultural theatrics it does not mean that he has a mental disorder. If a child wants to play, scream and fuck shit up like nature designed it, then this is perfectly normal. If the child is able to sit on a chair, glued on a screen and obey like a little soldier by copying savoir-vivre behavior then that is what is really fucked up — not the other way round.

Adding to this, we have to accept the fact that children imitate their parents. More and more millennials are literally glued in front of a screen all day long. How do you think a child will develop in such an environment? Monkey see, monkey do. People forget that children almost never hear words. Children imitate actions and body behavior. This is also why communication is mostly non-verbal. If there is behavioral incentive at home, and other kids are also screen-zombified then they will not find anything interesting while interacting which one another nor will they learn from their parents no matter how much they bitch about it with advice. This is the single most important mistake parents do but almost everybody seems to be oblivious to it. Parent comes dead tired from work, opens the computer and then he wonders why his neglected child is a behavioral fuck up.

Parents also forget that sometimes the kid just has to be told "Hey don't say or do shit like X." Many parents have no clue how to raise a child. They rather believe the new postmodern meme that something magical will manifest into its character because "fuck yeah intuition". Nature has designed children to be brought up and shaped mainly by parents. This is the very reason why the brain in young mammals is so plastic.. Children, no matter how idealistic we want them to be, do not just absorb info magically and become critical thinkers. They have to be sculpted to act in a certain way. Most people confuse this by saying to children what to think instead of how to think.

Adding to all these, the technological comfort of our time has created children that just want things as easy as they can get them from a computer click. They will scream and generally be a pain in the ass if something does not land in their lap. Nobody will do anything to guide their behavior or teach them coping skills because the parents have their heads too much far up their asses with the lame excuse of "Oh they're autistic". On top of this, they get to put on an individual education plan that makes it is almost impossible for the teacher to fail them. Other students around them reinforce the same behavior and voila: every single parent requires an excuse for their irresponsibility and laziness by throwing the "my child is autistic" trump card.

Autism Spectrum Disorder is nothing but a persistent failure to learn social norms and develop fluency in the language of social archetypes. It's a refusal of adopting basic real-life social knowledge that either comes as a result of parenthood or technology. The excuse of the condition also implies that the child is somehow "gifted" in other areas and that gives leverage for reinforcing such a behavior. All a child has to do is demonstrate a subjective lack of interaction with other kids or show absence of social role models which by the way vary massively.

What we observe today is the equivalent to the environmental issues of the early 20th century, like lead and mercury poisoning. The only difference is that instead of physical pollutants, we now have behavioral ones. When there was no internet, people couldn't escape social interactions and they had to learn the rules of engaging with one another. This is not to imply that technology is bad. It is what it is. Times change. Nonetheless, just because we are caught up in the middle of this, it does not mean there is something wrong with us.

Prior to the internet age, those who are considered autistic either learned to deal with it or became recluses. Recluses that had a few interests and little interaction with people used to excel in their fields since everything they did, they did with massive obsession. This is also where I.Q falls short. Behind every single innovator we can easily see a person with what psychology falsely calls OCD (Obsessive Compulsive Behavior). Eventually these people will make it in their field. Bill Gates was one. Tesla was another. Much like recluses of the past, children do not learn social skills because simply the don't need to. They don't engage with many activities because our economic system focuses on specialization rather than a "jack of all trades" behavior that used to dominate in the past.

True autistic individuals are truly dysfunctional in every possible aspect. They are a very small percentage of the human population — not even a single digit. Yet, today with the ridiculous autism spectrum the numbers seems to grow like herpes in a brothel. This alone should indicate that we are talking about behavioral meme, not a biologically causative factor.

Parents often try to excuse such an autistic behavior with false correlations such as in the case with vaccinations. Sure, some children might react bad to some vaccinations but the "vaccines cause autism" statement is as accurate as measuring your fart's density on Everest. When autism itself has yet be defined properly, everyone jumps the excuse train with the first chance they get. It does not take long for irresponsibility to mask as some external factor such as screen glued parents excusing their own shortcomings with the generic label of autism.

The increase of autism might also be correlated with another factor; evolutionary fitness. We no longer have large wars and day to day survival duels that would naturally eliminate weaker individuals in the "autism spectrum". There's no more child labor either, where children (with problems or not) just do a menial task until they die and nobody notices the difference. Every single airheaded millennial wants their child to become the next Tesla but they all soon realize that their offspring are not cut up for it — no matter what they try to do. This makes them feel unease. Labeling them with the title" autistic" and offering them "special treatment" makes them feel better.

Professor Baron-Cohen demonstrated in a study that "Geeky parents", tend to have autistic children. The fact that there is no evidence demonstrating that is something genetic going on, it surely reinforces the idea that children simply reflect on parents' behavior. Simply put, parents who are focused on a skill that deals with things that most of society does not engage or understand, will more likely transfer similar behavior to their children. These children from their turn will have hard time engaging with other regular minded children.

Mental Disorders have become so fashionably accepted that is rather worrying. Every single problem we face today, every single thing we don't like, is labeled as a disorder and we pay someone else to solve it. We outsource our children's future because we deny to face the harsh truth. The autism spectrum cannot function as an excuse for categorizing our children as problematic but specially smart. If anything, the whole narrative speaks volumes about the behavioral shortcomings of the parents.











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I enjoyed every word of this article. Congrats for the quality of content! It's a very good lesson on how to raise your children!

glad you like it.

You forgot to mention Big pharma.They're drug pushers. They feed kids with pills in schools like candies.

I will write a post about this one

I do think that autism is a real disorder. The Theory of mind by Baron Cohen makes much sense to me. The neurobiology between Asperger is very interesting. I guess there is also some defect in the development of mirror neurons: Neuronal systems very important in socialising and mirroring others. But I also believe that psychology in general is not a real science. Thus, I do think that people might wrongly be diagnosed with ASD. Temple Grandin has classic ASD, and you get a lot of insight into this conditions be reading her very introspective writings.

In order to understand the concept of "Autism", we have to understand the concept of "diagnosis."

The problem with the current conception of a "diagnosis" is that there is a presumption that once a diagnosis is applied, there is some actual knowledge about what is going on.

Much of the time, this presumption is not accurate.

Most "diagnoses" are simply a reformulation of the initial complaint, but in medicalese. Show up to the doctor and say your joints hurt? Why, son, you have "arthritis" (means inflammation or pain in the joints.) Note -- no real knowledge of WHY this is happening -- you just get your initial problem parroted back to you with a different name. That's your "diagnosis."

So apply this to Autism. You go to the doctor because there is a behavioral problem. And they give you a diagnosis of "Autism" --but that doesn't mean they have any idea what is actually going on. They just lump a bunch of problematic behaviors together and call them a name, but you could have done that yourself.

The problem with the diagnosis of Autism is that there is no underlying conception about what is wrong. There is, in fact, no reason to believe that folks diagnosed with autism have even remotely the same thing going on.

For example, there are parents who go through the hell of their normal child suddenly regressing, getting severe bowel problems and cycling between horrible constipation and wicked diarrhea, being completely incapable of interacting in any functional way, retreating to corners with their hands over their ears because they are so exquisitely sensitive to sound -- no one who has had any interactions with these children would attempt to belittle their condition as somehow "normal." And yet -- you also have socially awkward children with no other physical problems who are also diagnosed with the same problem, or at least in another place on the "Autism spectrum."

So -- when you are muddying the waters by insisting on giving people with vastly different problems the same diagnosis, when you resort to Junk Science by putting everything that you don't understand into the same basket, is it surprising that we can't figure out what the problem is?

Imagine if every time your car stopped working, society called it "Dys-enginemia." And then, you tried hard to figure out what was causing "Dys-enginemia", but there seemed to be no pattern -- sometimes you would find battery problems, sometimes valve problems, sometimes ignition problems, sometimes compression problems, and sometimes fuel injector problems. But it wasn't always the same problem.

And so your conclusion would be that valve problems cannot possibly cause "Dys-enginemia" because not every engine with the diagnosis has a valve problem. And in fact, you can "scientifically prove" that valve problems cannot possibly be the cause of dys-enginemia because only about 5% of engines with this diagnosis have this problem. And similarly, compression problems cannot possibly cause it because not every engine would have that problem, and so forth and so on.

Do you see how the junk diagnosis, the insistence on lumping all of the problems under the same heading, makes it absolutely impossible for you to find the problem, because the problems in fact all stem from completely different issues? The root cause of your inability to locate the problem is your insistence on starting from the "diagnosis" and attempting to prove that they are all the result of the same problem, when in fact they are not.

Thanks for posting this. I have friends who are teachers, and over time -- the last few years especially -- they seem to have had an explosion of students they insist are on the "spectrum." It's become a meaningless word. I often worry about how this children will grow up, and whether labeling them this way -- and with such nonchalance -- may hurt them in the long term.

yeap. it has become an excuse-meme

I have read a few of your articles and it seams to me that an underlying theory that you don't mention but guides your opinion is the debate between Nature or Nurture. Here, on Autism and earlier on Introvert/extrovert you argue that it is social norms and life circumstances that determin these "conditions". You go as far as calling them bull shit, in other words completely made up or 100% nurture. What roll does nature, our genetic heritage, play in personal traits or abilities/disabilities like these?

I have referenced plenty of evidence in my post. Check the hyperlinks.

You go as far as calling them bull shit, in other words completely made up or 100% nurture. What roll does nature, our genetic heritage, play in personal traits or abilities/disabilities like these?

There is no evidence for genetic predisposition to explain such a massive trend in autism — nor there is for introversion/extroversion. They are based on subjective spectrums that seem to expand or retract depending on who examines them.

A very small percentage of the population has indeed severe learning disability and/or issues with socializing. Again, this percentage is extremely small. Thing is, with the "spectrum" theory, anyone can fall within that range and labeled as "autistic" with no other evidence other than a random person taking an interview and checking boxes.

If the parent is exposed to the idea of autism, even worse since their own bias will affect how those answers will be filled.

I think many so call psychological/ mental disorders are made up terms to describe people within the normal distribution curve. I don't mean all mental disorders are not real, but i with that normal distribution curve!!

I mean its also important for us to know that there is not just 1 normal distribution curve for a mental condition, it must be a multifactorial one!! And people go too over to classify people into "mental disorders", then start blaming stuff to cause them. We are all lying on some point of the normal distribution curve, and in the past it might not be as easily to access information so you didn't know others who "suffers" from it, but now, everything goes online~

I often say state that "whoever has parents, has issues" just to piss of the person who claims disorders for just about anything.

I sometimes think that these days, anyone able to focus long enough on one subject to read a posting like yours will be classified as having some form of autism. Maybe we'll see the day that people who are able to read and digest a 1200-page history book will be diagnosed and locked up for their own safety.

At the extremes, autism is a disability of sorts, of course, but the "spectrum" has been stretched to include just about anybody, as if individual differences aren't supposed to exist, ignoring the fact that few things get designed and built without some engineer somewhere going into "autistic mode" for a while.

Maybe we'll see the day that people who are able to read and digest a 1200-page history book will be diagnosed and locked up for their own safety.

lol. I would need a mental institution for sure.

At the extremes, autism is a disability of sorts, of course, but the "spectrum" has been stretched to include just about anybody, as if individual differences aren't supposed to exist, ignoring the fact that few things get designed and built without some engineer somewhere going into "autistic mode" for a while.

awesomely put

I work with kids on the spectrum, and they bring me such joy. My agency focuses on ABA therapy, and I've had a lot of success using it with non-verbal kids who are learning to be verbal. Thanks for the post, autism awareness is always great.

So you are saying that this is a behavioral training issue that can be manipulated given enough time resources.

Yes that's basically what ABA is

so you admit that this is entirely a behavioral thing that probably started from the child's environment aka family

I was not very talkative either and couldn't hear or talk well until high school & college. I probably have autism. Different kinds of people learn & do things differently. I went on to be a camp counselor for five years. My life is an example of the hope they can have. Was born 1985 in Oregon and now I'm teaching in Vietnam. IT does take more patient to work with some kids but it is totally worth it.

probably not

I agree! Patience is key, and never giving up on a child even if they do pose some challenges

My uncle has autism but found love in music, he was able to get a job a record store and alphabetized the entire shore his first week there

Thank you for writing this. There are many personality traits - some I posses - that could be called autistic. Things that used to be known as being introverted or socially awkward. Some of these traits I simply grew out of.

I have little doubt that were I born a decade later I would have been diagnosed as autistic. They wanted to diagnose my nephew with autism when he was 4. Now at 7 he's a perfectly happy, outgoing kid with lots of friends and completely "normal".

Your example describes perfectly what is going on in the world right now with how autism and introversion is perceived.

I have no interest in disparaging anyone who is close to a child that has real cognitive issues, but the spectrum diagnosis of today are scaring the pants off the parents, who are demanding special help for children that are slightly off base.

I have two nephews that both started being verbal later than most, were diagnosed with severe autism by the age of 2, and by the time they hit 6, they were acting like the dorky kids I grew up with. They'll likely have to ape their way thru life, learning off other's social cues.

My point is that the diagnosis come off so draconian and the reality is that these kids will likely live a close to normal life.

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