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Glances of autism | Carina Morillo | TEDxRíodelaPlata

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    "Look at me!"
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    That phrase turned me
    into an eye-contact coach.
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    I the mother of Ivan; he's 15 years old.
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    Ivan has autism, he doesn't speak,
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    and he communicates through an iPad,
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    where his whole universe of words
    exists in images.
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    He was diagnosed
    when he was two and a half.
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    I still remember that day painfully.
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    My husband and I felt really lost;
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    we didn't know where to start.
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    There was no Internet,
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    you couldn't Google information,
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    so we made those first steps
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    out of sheer intuition.
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    Ivan would not maintain eye contact,
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    he had lost the words that he did know,
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    he didn't respond to his name,
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    or to anything we asked him,
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    as if words were noise.
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    The only way I could know
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    what was going on, what he felt,
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    was looking him in the eye.
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    But that bridge was broken.
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    How could I teach him about life?
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    When I did things he liked,
    he would look at me;
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    and we were connected.
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    So I dedicated myself
    to working with him on those things,
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    so we would have more and more
    eye-contact moments.
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    We would spend hours and hours playing tag
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    with her older sister, Alexia,
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    and when we said, "I caught you!"
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    he would look around for us,
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    and, at that moment,
    I could feel he was alive.
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    We also hold a record of hours
    spent in a swimming pool.
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    Ivan always had a passion for water.
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    I remember when he was two and a half,
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    on a rainy winter day,
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    I was taking him to an indoor pool,
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    because even on rainy days
    we'd go swimming.
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    We were on the highway,
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    and I took the wrong exit.
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    He burst into tears and cried
    inconsolably, non stop,
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    until I turned back.
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    Only then did he calm down.
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    How was it possible
    that a two and a half year old
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    didn't respond to his own name,
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    yet in the middle of the rain and fog,
    where I couldn't see anything,
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    he knew the exact route?
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    That is when I realized that Ivan
    had an exceptional visual memory
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    and that this would be my way in.
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    So I started
    taking pictures of everything,
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    and teaching him what life was like,
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    showing it to him, picture by picture.
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    Even now it's the way Ivan communicates
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    what he wants, what he needs,
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    and also what he feels.
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    But it wasn't just
    Ivan's eye contact that mattered.
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    Everyone else's did, too.
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    How could I make people see
    not only his autism,
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    but see him, the person,
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    and everything he can give;
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    everything he can do;
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    the things he likes and doesn't like,
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    just like any one of us?
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    But for that I also had to give of myself.
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    I had to have the strength to let him go,
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    which was extremely difficult.
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    Ivan was 11 years old,
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    and he went for treatment
    in a neighborhood near our house.
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    One afternoon,
    while I was waiting for him,
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    I went into a greengrocer,
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    a typical neighborhood store
    with a little bit of everything.
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    While doing the shopping,
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    I started talking to Jose, the owner.
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    I told him that Ivan had autism,
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    and that I wanted him to learn
    to walk down the street by himself,
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    without anyone holding his hand.
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    So I decided to ask Jose
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    if Thursdays around 2 pm,
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    Ivan could come and help him arrange
    the water bottles of the shelves,
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    because he loved to organize things.
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    And as a reward, he could buy
    some chocolate cookies,
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    which were his favorite.
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    He accepted right away.
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    So that's how it went for a year:
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    Ivan would go to Jose's greengrocer,
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    help him arrange the shelves
    of water bottles,
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    with the labels perfectly
    lined up on the same side
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    and he would leave happy
    with his chocolate cookies.
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    Jose is not an expert in autism.
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    There is no need to be an expert,
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    nor do anything heroic to include someone.
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    We just need to be there -
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    (Applause)
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    (Applause ends)
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    Really, no heroic deed --
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    we simply need to be close.
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    And if we are afraid of something
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    or we don't understand something,
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    we need to ask.
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    Let's be curious
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    but never indifferent.
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    Let's have the courage
    to look each other in the eye,
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    because by looking,
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    we can open a whole world to someone else.
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    (Applause)
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    (Cheers)
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you so much, thank you!
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    (Applause)
Title:
Glances of autism | Carina Morillo | TEDxRíodelaPlata
Description:

How important a gaze can be in human communication? What happens when a gaze is the only way of communication we can establish with others? Carina Morillo tells us how she could teach Ivan - her son with autism - about life, using the power of gazing. Carina has an eloquent blue blue gaze that tells, for instance, that she is mother of Iván, a 15 year-old with autism. In 2010 she created a foundation, Brincar for a happy autism; as a way to build links and inclusive spaces.

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences. Learn more at: http://ted.com/tedx

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Video Language:
Spanish
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
07:55

English subtitles

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