When speech replaces language and algorithms reward explanation over recognition, entire forms of autistic knowing disappear. A deep dive into gestalt processing, meaning-making, visibility, and the pathways we build to find ourselves.
This first episode of AutSide After Dark grows out of a question that has been following me for some time: what happens when the knowledge exists, but the pathways leading to it remain hidden? In The Colour Was There All Along, I argued that many of the most important discoveries in our lives are not discoveries at all. They are moments of access. The language was there. The explanations were there. The people were there. What was missing was a route through. In this conversation, I return to that idea of enclosure and ask whether it may be shaping not only autism research and practice, but the online spaces where autistic people increasingly come to understand themselves.
The first half of the episode explores what I call The Great Substitution: the tendency to confuse speech with language. Speech is visible. It can be counted, measured, and documented. Language is something much larger. Language is how we organise experience, construct identity, and make meaning across time. Drawing on my own journey—from an autism diagnosis in my thirties to discovering gestalt processing in my fifties—I reflect on the possibility that some of the most significant language development in autistic lives may occur long after childhood services have ended. Not vocabulary. Not grammar. Meaning. Narrative. The lifelong work of understanding what happened to us.
From there, I turn toward social media and the kinds of autistic voices that become most visible online. Many of the most successful formats are analytic in structure: lists, traits, categories, explanations, and scripts. There is nothing inherently wrong with this. Yet I wonder what happens to forms of cognition that depend on accumulation, resonance, context, and duration. What happens when the whole arrives before the explanation? What happens when a platform rewards compression while your experience requires space? The question is not whether analytic communication is valid. It is what becomes difficult to see when it dominates the conversation.
This leads into a discussion of what I have come to call the Script Garden: the lifelong cultivation of language, memory, and meaning. Many adult gestalt processors seem to spend years building pathways between experiences that were never fully understood at the time they occurred. Diagnosis, relationships, transition, work, trauma, belonging, identity—slowly assembled into something coherent. Yet much of this work remains surprisingly invisible, even within autism spaces themselves. In that sense, gestalt processors may represent a cognitive minority within a cognitive minority, often discovering themselves not through established pathways but through resonance, accident, and recognition.
The episode closes by returning to one of the oldest threads running through my work. Long before I was writing about gestalt processing, I was writing about ecology, environments, and the conditions that allow people to flourish. One of my earlier papers could not find a home in academia, so I built one. In many ways, that is why The AutSide exists at all—not as a platform or a brand, but as an archive. A place where ideas can wait for the language that will eventually make them visible. More than four years on, I remain astonished by the community that has gathered around that project. Thousands of readers, listeners, correspondents, and fellow travellers. People building their own Script Gardens. Their own pathways. Their own archives of meaning. This conversation is for them.
—apologies for the overly pixelated video. The Substack Recording Studio has a big problem with bandwidth it seems…
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit autside.substack.com/subscribe