I have recently been invited to give a 7 minute talk on a panel for reproductive and sexual health rights for disabled people, particularly disabled women and girls, at the House of Lords on a summit called: "Developing New Future Leaders: Everybody Matters in Development". At first, I was panicked about it, as I didn't know what to cover out of all the various issues about autistic sexual health and reproductive rights. But, as always, with a bit of cross-posting on Twitter and various groups on Facebook, the autistic community came to the rescue. I tried to condense all their points in roughly 1000 words (which is around 7 minutes). I am sharing it below, for anybody interested.↓↓↓
Being an autistic individual in
the world, one of the first things you learn about yourself is that you are
wrong. Everything you do is wrong. You should be making eye contact. Even
though it hurts. Even though you can’t look AND listen to someone at the same
time. You have difficulty processing. From the very beginning of your life,
everyone around you is looking for ways to fix you. Make you look less
autistic. Make you look less like YOU. To this day, many popular interventions
that target autistic children are compliance-based and focus on making them
less autistic. A prime example of that is Applied Behaviour Analysis, which
widely used to this day and has roots to the same principles as gay conversion
therapy.
So what does that teach children?
It teaches them that what they think is not right, appropriate or valid, it
teaches them to ignore their own instincts, to comply to other people’s
requests making them prime targets for ALL kinds of predators. On top of that,
autistic people struggle to read body language, or understand non-autistic
people, just as non-autistic people struggle understand autistic people. As a
result, we often put ourselves in dangerous situations, because we didn’t see
them coming. We are prone targets for sexual violence. About two years ago, someone
in a Facebook group for autistic women I am part of asked: “How did you lose
your virginity?” The post received about 100 responses. About 60% of the
responses on that post said “Involuntarily”. That’s right. 60 out of 100
autistic women who responded in that post claimed that they lost their
virginity by rape. And there are no official numbers on this, as there is
little to no research on these topics at the moment.
Part of the problem is sexual
education at schools. Education that is heteronormative and does not target the
needs of disabled and autistic individuals. Many of us, perhaps particularly
those of us who were identified as female at birth, don’t even know that we are
autistic until much later in life, something which is rarely recognised still. Sexual
education needs to address topics that are still often considered taboo and
hard to talk about EXPLICITLY if it is it to help people (of all ages) who find
it hard to understand inuendos and implicit meanings. Contrary to popular
misconceptions, autistic people CAN and many of us ARE sexually active. Teach
people how to give and receive meaningful consent. How can someone who has
processing difficulties and delayed reactions keep themselves safe in a sexual
relationship. How to manage their sensory sensitivities in a sexual
relationship in a helpful way. Don’t just teach how people get pregnant or how
babies grow but tell autistic people what to expect when getting pregnant, tell
them about all the ways the body and the mind changes during pregnancy and
breastfeeding explicitly, as well as how to best be prepared for it.
It also needs to cover the needs
of all sexualities and genders, not just of those who are heterosexual. As a personal
estimation, in lack of any research in the area, I believe that at least a third of all
autistic people are part of sexual and/or gender minority (lesbian, gay,
bisexual, transgender, non-binary). Educators need to know that. Services, such
as gender clinics, need to be aware of that, as they are currently very
inaccessible to this very large demographic. Parents and carers need to know
that, as having your gender and sexual identity being unrecognised
can lead to serious mental health problems, isolation and suicidal ideation or attempts. Accessible services, informative sexual education and supportive environments can
go a long way into changing that.
Finally, it is important to protect the reproductive rights of autistic and disabled people. Many disabled people often tell me that they are coerced into not reproducing, so that they won’t carry their “disease” to the next generation, as disability is still seen as subhuman. I hope that one day I will be the proud parent of autistic children, just I hope that I will be the proud parent of non-autistic children. Autistic and disabled people are also often seen as unable to be good parents or be parents at all. They are often at high risk of having their children removed from them, because of lack of autism understanding from social services. After all, in many non-autistic people’s minds, lack of eye contact is often one of the first signs of guilt and lying. Finally, autistic people also need to be supported on how to pursue a safely delivered abortion and be meaningfully educated and prepared on the consequences that, if this is something they choose to do.
Finally, it is important to protect the reproductive rights of autistic and disabled people. Many disabled people often tell me that they are coerced into not reproducing, so that they won’t carry their “disease” to the next generation, as disability is still seen as subhuman. I hope that one day I will be the proud parent of autistic children, just I hope that I will be the proud parent of non-autistic children. Autistic and disabled people are also often seen as unable to be good parents or be parents at all. They are often at high risk of having their children removed from them, because of lack of autism understanding from social services. After all, in many non-autistic people’s minds, lack of eye contact is often one of the first signs of guilt and lying. Finally, autistic people also need to be supported on how to pursue a safely delivered abortion and be meaningfully educated and prepared on the consequences that, if this is something they choose to do.
Masking is also something that
many autistic people learn and feel forced to do. If I am told all my life that
I am always wrong and everything I do is wrong, is it any wonder that I, as a
strategic and logical thinker who loves to solve problems, am going to look for
examples of people I should be like and start to mimic them? The result of that
is putting mask after mask on my behaviour until even I don’t recognise myself
anymore. And everybody around me knows the mask, not me. And what’s worse,
people force me to keep that mask on. Our partners, “friends” and carers
convince us to think that our masks are who we are, that “flappy hands” (stimming
to reduce stress or show excitement) make us look weird, that we need to try to
fit in more. We often can’t even be ourselves around our loved ones in the
privacy of our own home. As a result, emotional abuse experienced by autistic
individuals is alarmingly common.
As a result, so many of us are
left with lingering trauma. So many services and professionals don’t know how
to approach and support us. Common autistic experiences, such as monotropic focus
on particular areas and sensory sensitivities, are often ignored or
misunderstood. Academic research about autism that is done on us not WITH us. We
are often excluded from the research and policy making spaces and we are not
heard even about topics on our lives and lived experiences.
I am an autistic PhD student
doing research on autism and gender, because I believe that these issues need
to be addressed. I am doing my PhD on a scholarship that is half the minimum
wage (chronically underfunded area), which is my only income at the moment. It
is hard, but I believe in the importance of what I do, so I do my best with
what I am given. As do many of us, hours and hours of unpaid work and activism
to support a community that in the eyes of many, doesn’t even exist. So I am
here to tell you that we exist. We matter. And I hope that you take notice.
Thank you.