It means your brain works in a different way from other people.
Autism is not a medical condition with treatments or a “cure”. Autism is a processing difference that can have an impact on many areas of a person’s life.
Autistic people will experience differences in three key areas
- Social Understanding and Communication
Autistic people have differences in the way they communicate, understand and use language. They engage in social life from a different perspective (Milton, 2011). This leads to differences in how the person interacts and develops relationships.
- Sensory Processing and Integration
Sensory differences can include hyper (high) or hypo (low) sensitivity in relation the eight senses of sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell, interoception (internal sensations), balance (vestibular) and body awareness (proprioception). These differences will vary from person to person and can actually fluctuate in their responsiveness depending on a number of different factors for example the time of day or the environment.
- Flexible Thinking, Information Processing and Understanding
Autistic people have differences in their attention, interests and how they learn. This can include being very focused on particular interests. They have a different way of being flexible, so often feel safer and more comfortable with routines and structure as this lessens uncertainty.
While autistic people share these similar characteristics to some degree, they are also all different from each other. This is because autism is considered a spectrum. The autism spectrum is not linear from high to low but varies in every way that one person might vary from another.
There is no ‘typical’ autistic person. Every autistic individual has their own strengths, differences and needs, their own life journey and their own unique story.