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ASPartOfMe
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04 Oct 2019, 3:10 am

Topeka woman describes life with autism

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What is it like to live with autism? The answer to that question has changed over the years for people living with it.

Topeka author, 68-year-old Barbara Moran, describes what it was like to grow up in a world where she felt misunderstood.

Things were different for Barb as she was growing up. Barb was the youngest of 7 kids.

“She was odd from the get-go,” said Ruth Moran, Barbara’s sister

Ruth said her parents tried putting her through a number of schools, but she didn’t last long in any of them.

When Barbara was 10 years old, she went to Menniger’s in Topeka, one of the country’s top facilities for mental health patients.

She was there for seven years. But early on at Mennigers, and throughout her life, Barb felt like she had to conform to the expectations and standards of society. Awareness and understanding of people living with autism was limited.

So Barb relates more to objects than to people, including “Rooney” an old refrigerator she got in 1979, that lives in her apartment with her today.

Barb is also passionate about trains. She draws them, visits them, and names them.

“I couldn’t connect with people and understand them. They were a foreign language to me. I thought of an object as somehow being (something I was) able to say what I wanted to it,” Barbara said. And objects didn’t judge her.

But Barb said what mattered most to her, “As soon as I got to have freedom, that made a difference, and just being able to make decisions and get things I wanted.”

Barb finally got her freedom.

After meeting author Karl Williams at a national Autism Conference, Barbara got the opportunity to tell her story, the way she lived it.

Over the decades, Barbara and Ruth have seen awareness, understanding, and acceptance of people with autism change.

Today their message to everyone is, “Be curious when encountering a person who is a little odd. And try to approach that person not only with curiosity but also an open heart. For years, I’ve watched people turn away from her (Barb) so I don’t view society as particularly accommodating, although much better than previously,” said Ruth.

I want people with autism and mental illness to be treated seriously.
– BARBARA MORAN


Hello, Stranger: My Life on the Autism Spectrum


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Professionally Identified and joined WP August 26, 2013
DSM 5: Autism Spectrum Disorder, DSM IV: Aspergers Moderate Severity

It is Autism Acceptance Month

“My autism is not a superpower. It also isn’t some kind of god-forsaken, endless fountain of suffering inflicted on my family. It’s just part of who I am as a person”. - Sara Luterman


Jakki
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07 Oct 2019, 9:31 pm

Am so cery glad for her .. medievel atitudes towards autism ,, need soo much help.


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