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How People with Autism Grieve, and How to Help
How People with Autism Grieve, and How to Help: An Insider Handbook | Deborah Lipsky
2 posts | 1 read
The book is an honest, first-hand account of how people with autism deal with the loss of someone in their life. Unlike the non-autistic response, people with autism, when faced with overwhelming or stressful situations, will favour solitude over sharing their emotions, tend to focus on special interests, and become extremely logical, often not expressing any emotion. This behaviour often leads to the belief that people with autism lack empathy, which is far from the case. Through the description of personal experience, and case studies, the book explores how people with autism feel and express the loss of a loved one, how they process and come to terms with their feelings of grief, and offers practical and detailed advice to parents and carers on a range of sensitive issues. These include clear instructions on how best to support someone with autism through the grieving process, how to prepare them for bad news, how to break the bad news, how to involve them in the funeral or wake, and how best to respond to later reactions. The final chapter explores the issue of why children and teens with autism can be drawn to death as a special interest, and explains that the interest is not normally a morbid one.
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Kerrbearlib
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This quote is my biggest issue with this book. To say that the average autistic person acts manipulative is untrue. It's also untrue that the average autistic person expects others to assimilate to their needs. It may be true for some people with autism, including this author. But it's not true for all people with autism.

TieDyeDude I feel like that would certainly apply to individuals with low-functioning autism, or maybe those who grew up in a very supportive environment, but it seems like masking is much more common on average. 1mo
13 likes2 comments
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Kerrbearlib
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Mehso-so

This book is centered on how the author, who has autism herself, experiences grief. It is not reflective of how all autistic people grieve, but the author presents it that way. This is problematic. It‘s written for an allistic audience (people who are not autistic.) Her one-sided perspective may give allistics the idea all autistic people are the same. I recommend this book, but encourage readers to remember her way of grieving is not universal.