Zoom Autism Magazine Summer 2015 (Issue 4) | Page 28

“Language is not efficient communication for me, but alas, it is the only socially acceptable channel at this time. Like my typing, human evolution is slow. ” Lucky for me, I am PATIENT ~ Barb people curious about my abilities. “Can you read?” is a common question. I am not offended – OK, maybe a little, but here is the deal: I read well one word at a time if the font is at least size 18. However, I prefer to take a mental picture of the page and file it so that I may consider it and recall it at my leisure. The most efficient way for me to take in written information is to hear it. When I listen to audiobooks, my prized Great Teaching Courses, or someone reading aloud to me, I go into my half-shell. I pull my shirt over my head or, if feeling unusually puritanical, I lower my head in my hands or a lap pillow so that my vision processes only internal stimuli. I would simply close my eyes, but they do not reliably stay shut as “simply” is as uncommon in my design as fatal bowling injuries. I use all my energy to process heard words into visual representations and file accordingly. If I have to read the words first, it requires a double translation from the 26 visual symbols to word chunks and then again to visual scenes of meaning. Once you understand how you think best, I recommend taking charge of your own enrichment and environment. I was at school but never in school. The mind is a beautiful place to be. ----ZOOM: When did you start using Facilitated Communication? Barb: 1992. I was nineteen years old and had just returned from Syracuse, New York, where my parents met my mind for the first time in seventeen years. I’d had an early debut, but then, just before I turned two, my humanity went into hibernation. Thinking ceased to build upon itself. That is when Barbara Ruth filled in for me and went into survival mode. Each moment was a confusing ambush, and she sought only to gulp the next breath of fleeting clarity. Words changed all that, and my parents bought those in upstate New York. It was a sweet purchase – a two for one: words and a daughter with a 30 ZOOM Autism through Many Lenses The Rentenbachs: Niece Augusta, Smother, Beautiful me, DD, Nephew John, and Big Bro Tim. mind fitted for external communication. Some purchases change the world. I often write that I study history to know what is probable. I also study history to know what is possible. Consider the Louisiana Purchase and the consequent Lewis and Clark’s boundary mission “Corp of Discovery.” They were able to circumnavigate great falls by the Shoshone Chief Cameahwait connecting with his sister, Sacagawea, in Shoshone, who is a tidy job, then spoke to her French Canadian but husband, Charbonneau, in Mandan, who then talked in French to Jusseaume (another interpreter), who communicated to Lewis and Clark in English. Gifts were exchanged, and everybody got what they needed. “Being a muse somebody has to do it.” You will discover that you can find a way to communicate. Then you too will exchange gifts and may achieve your destiny. Conner: How did you meet? Barb: DD hired headhunters. Next thing I knew, we had a family interview with a “highly recommended specialist.” Turns out that it was just baby doc SS in a flashy new sports car. I decided to keep her. ----ZOOM: Did you both click right away, or did it take some time? Barb: When typing takes so much time and energy, it is wise to recycle. Please allow this excerpt from I Might Be You to set the stage. Next, I was to get to know the smiling shrink. The following Monday, we went on a solo mission to Wendy’s fast-food restaurant, where I conducted many experiments on the eager young shrink. First, repulsion—would she be able to withstand the public embarrassment of dining with a growling Neanderthal who devoured both portions of cow? She ZOOM Autism through Many Lenses 31