Why do you flap your hands in front of your face? by Julia Jones
I am one of many people currently
reading The Reason I Jump: one boy's voice from the silence of
autism by Naoki Higashida, translated by novelist David Mitchell
and his wife Keiko Yoshida. It's a unique and beautiful piece of
writing from a severely autistic thirteen year old who still (he's
now aged sixteen) cannot reliably control his body or hold a spoken
conversation.
David Mitchell
wrote an article in the Guardian explaining his personal
involvement (his son is autistic) and the book was also read on Radio
4. When I mention it to friends they say, “oh yes, I think I heard
that” or “I know the one you mean”. The hardback edition stands
at #2 in the Amazon top 100 books and is reprinting: the kindle
edition is unobtrusively available at #103. I am already thinking of
friends to whom I want to give The Reason I Jump. Not because
they are parents or teachers of autistic children but because it
speaks about the imperfect relationship between body and mind and the
importance of communication in our understanding of what it mean to
be human.
This book is
eloquent – yet Naoki Higashida's situation is that he cannot
reliably communicate. He explains how his words “flutter away”
from him; how the sounds which come out of his mouth often bear no
relation to what he is trying to express. “When there's a gap
between what I'm thinking and what I'm saying because the words that
come out of my mouth are the only ones I can access at that time.”
He knows that his voice often sounds “weird” – too loud, too
soft, bizarrely toned. “When my weird voice gets triggered , it's
almost impossible to hold it back and when I try it actually hurts,
almost as if I'm strangling my own throat.” He conveys his despair
“I used to wonder why Non-Speaking Me had ever been born.” Page
after page bring the tears prickling to my eyes.
Illustrated by Kai and Sunny |
For David Mitchell
and Keiko Yoshida, the parents of an autistic child, the discovery of
Naoki's book in its Japanese edition was life-changing. “Reading it
felt as if for the first time our own son was talking to us about
what was happening inside his head, through Naoki's words.”
I was drawn to The
Reason I Jump because my stories include imagined versions of
people who find “normal” life especially difficult – Skye
in the Strong Winds trilogy, Angel and Peter in my next (untitled)
book. I was surprised to notice how relevant some of Naoki's
explanations are to my mother's current situation as Alzheimer's makes it
harder for her to say exactly what she means. I remember what a
difference it made when I found the particular volume (Contented
Dementia by Oliver James) that helped me understand that although
mum's access to words and memories was becoming more and more
frustratingly difficult, her feelings were unaffected.
Naoki explains:
One of the biggest misunderstandings you have about us is
that our feelings aren't as subtle and complex as yours. Because how
we behave can appear so childish in your eyes, you tend to assume
that we're childish on the inside too. But of course we experience
the same emotions as you do. And, because people with autism
aren't skilful talkers, we may in fact be even more sensitive than you
are.
Alzheimer's is just one of several different words we could substitute for autism here, I think.
The Reason I
Jump is structured to offer answers to questions: “Why don't
you make eye contact when you're talking?” “Why do you make a
huge fuss over tiny mistakes? “Why do you memorise train timetables
and calendars?” “Why do you flap your fingers and hands in front
of your face?”
Here's Naoki's answer to that last one:
Flapping our
fingers and hands in front of our faces allows the light to enter our
eyes in a pleasant filtered fashion. Light that reaches us like this
feels soft and gentle, like moonlight. But 'unfiltered' direct light
sort of 'needles' its way into the eyeballs of people with autism in
sharp straight lines so we see too many points of light. This
actually makes our eyes hurt.
That said we
couldn't get by without light. Light wipes away our tears and when
we're bathed in light, we're happy. Perhaps we just love how its
particles pour down on us. Light particles somehow console us. I
admit this is something I can't quite explain using logic.
Naoki Higashida |
No, Naoki, you
can't explain it. You're a thirteen-year-old spelling out your
thoughts letter by letter, pointing at an alphabet grid that your
mother made for you. You can't give us a clearcut answer with a
uniformly-replicable solution but you can express your sensations –
memorably. You also create fairy stories and fables; you help us
understand your feelings of friendship with nature. “However often
we're ignored and pushed away by other people nature will always give
us a good big hug here inside our hearts.”
As David Mitchell
says in his introduction, you are a writer, Naoki Higashida, “an
honest, thoughtful, modest writer.”
Comments
And I found something out about myself. There's just that brief moment of- YES lets give it its name- JEALOUSY that someone else is getting the story out there. It lasts only a nanosecond of course because this is not about ME its about Autism awareness and after that moment I'm so happy that at least someone 'mainstream' is fighting the fight. There is a bit of a downside though, ( is it a bitter aftertaste?) as it really makes me wonder whether it's worth me bothering to fight my wee Guerrilla Midgie corner. I'm trying to stick with the Tolstoyian notion of 'adding my small light to the sum of light' but it does make me wonder if I wouldn't be better spending my time out in the sun reading Naoki, than writing. I know its all about the stories but unless those stories get readers... I'm off to work on ego reduction for a bit and remind myself what matters. Not me (or my writing) that's for sure. Today, in the sun, retirement looks like a much easier option.
Please feel free to download a free copy of Jock Tamson's bairns http://www.hoampresst.co.uk/free-downloads.html and then you can give me the benefit of your OWN opinion as to whether I'm a 'good writer' or just an envious wannabee peddling my own agenda. I'd be really interested to know.
And that free offer is open all round. If I'm some deluded fool who is only doing all this for self aggrandisement and should really spend more time sitting in the sun reading 'really' good writers I'd be happy to know that. Seriously.
And thanks Julia because your blog gave me the kick up the arse to actually pull all the Jock Tamson stories together and get the ebook out there today. And resolved my FREE dilemma. It's about raising awareness, not about money. I hear Dan Holloway cheering in the background as Guerrilla Midgie takes an executive decision to start publishing FOR FREE.
Cally - I know exactly how you feel - it eats into your insides. Just keep writing and putting it out there!! I'm cheering alongside Dan, though I haven't got the pom poms and the ra-ra skirt!
A few days ago, I began reading a novel which made me want to throw my PC out the window, though it's new enough for me to have merely put my head down on my desk and howled. Never in a kwakabazillion years would I ever write as well as this bloke - and he's young enough to be my son.