I felt completely different from the other kids. We moved a lot when I was young, so I was in a new school every year. Atlanta, Knoxville, Meridian, Anniston, Birmingham and Pensacola. That was just through the seventh grade.
I was always the new kid in class. I was always the new “smartest kid in class,” too. But even beyond that, I simply felt different from the others. My thinking was different. I wanted different things. My play was different. I felt like an alien.
But on the outside, I complied with every norm of my childhood culture. I looked and acted like the others. I obeyed their norms. I learned to fit. I didn’t want to, but I learned to play the part that was expected of me. I was forced to learn.
I’ve been thinking about this lately because I’ve been learning about the experiences of high-functioning autistic children and their families. Until recently, I’d never thought about the challenges faced by such families, but now that I’m thinking through the issues involved, I feel a lot of empathy for children in such situations.
As I’ve learned about the therapy considered the “gold standard” for autistic children — “applied behavior analysis” — I’m comparing it to what I experienced as a child. I’m finding a lot of autistic people who say this therapy is abusive. And I don’t know what to think.
How far is it reasonable to go to mold and manipulate a child to fit into his or her society? Is it abusive and immoral to force someone whose nature is fundamentally different from ours to conform to our expectations?

NOTEBOOK: The forest is burning, so quit arguing about single trees
Suicide’s what happens when you can’t find reasons to keep living
We project an image for others, but few see us as we really are
Is ‘galvanic skin response’ a way to measure how much kids learn?
Libertarian freedom vs. conservative tradition leads to culture clash
Collective freak-out over tasteless shirt points to double standard
What do we prove with huge houses we can’t afford to pay for or even fill?
Once you’ve found the right love, build your whole world around her
Without growth on similar paths, two people drift apart, love dies