#but i had a somewhat solid understanding of autism (at least in young white boys lol) so my bullshit radar was like. fairly well developed
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Where do you get most of your autism info?
oo good question,, tbh a lot of stuff i just know cuz my both my brothers are diagnosed + my best friend growing up has it, so a lot of stuff i just kinda absorbed over the years from my family + friends. usually with factchecking that stuff i just google it and scan a couple sites that look trustworthy to see if it's something that seems widely agreed on or not before i say it conclusively
for specific online sources, i know the autism self advocacy network has a lot of good info, and embrace autism is also good. also spectrumnews.org and autistic women and nonbinary network <- these r all as far as i know but also i havent done like, a full background check on all of them so i might be incorrect
i think the main thing is double checking anything from social media or any article/news story/whatever with big red flags- it definitely varies and most of these things arent like, 100% indicators that something is wrong, more that the source might be biased or ableist or just outdated. but for me big red flags are -> allistic writer/speaker insisting on person-first language (tho thats still very common in psych spaces unfortunately), calling autism a "disease"/"epidemic" or saying it needs to be cured, the puzzle piece logo and "light it up blue" (red instead is the alternative movement for that, it's for autism Acceptance rather than awareness which is the movement with weird ableist undertones (overtones?)), that sort of thing. also checking for things written by autistic people or with imput from autistic people
also academic papers can be super dense (and somewhat ableist tbh) but they also have good information sometimes, so again just checking and seeing if there's other sources for stuff & if those look reputable
+ id say just in general be especially careful with stuff on social media bc ppl will Lie or misinterpret stuff or misremember or whatever and misinformation gets spread very very quickly . but also community is nice & can be incredibly helpful so it's difficult to completely disavow it yknow .
but yeah a lot of stuff ive learned from my family & friends over the years, and dont have super good specific sources for learning that sort of thing other than just hanging out with autistic people and absorbing stuff via osmosis HAHA but i hope some of that helps :}
#ask#impossibleraysykes#for me i already knew a lot of like factual(? diagnostic..? not sure the right word) stuff abt autism bc of my brothers#but it was really talking to autistic friends abt their experiences + watching autistic youtubers and stuff that helped me realize like#OH i DO show these symptoms too they just present differently for me. + work through the emotional + community aspect#but i had a somewhat solid understanding of autism (at least in young white boys lol) so my bullshit radar was like. fairly well developed#by then already + online autism spaces were a lot less misinformation-flooded* so i wasnt just jumping into the thick of it and trying to#sort thru it thank GOD. tho im sure ive definitely internalized some stuff that is just straight up wrong over the years so i try and doubl#check just in case 😭BUT YEAH i hope that helps!!#(*this was in like 2018 idky im talking abt it like it was ages ago lmao. pre-tiktok was a different era tho tbf)
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