A closing reflection on collapse, grief, autistic futurity, and the lies we were sold about planning, stability, and success—ending not in despair, but in the stubborn work of building smaller, truer futures together.
This video closes When the Future Won’t Hold by naming what the series was really trying to do. I was never writing about uncertainty in the abstract. I was trying to speak to a condition many of us already live inside—especially autistic people, especially gestalt processors, especially those of us whose minds, bodies, and ways of knowing were never fully reflected by the world around us. What happens when the promises we were handed stop working? What happens when the future we were told to build cannot actually hold our labour, our needs, our truth, or our lives? This series has been my attempt to sit with those questions honestly—not to manufacture reassurance, but to clear enough space for a more honest kind of possibility.
Across these pieces, I have been trying to name something larger than personal anxiety. The collapse I am describing is not only emotional or internal. It is material, political, economic, and infrastructural. Wages stagnate whilst purchasing power collapses. The cost of reaching work becomes its own form of extraction. Housing, transport, insurance, food, schooling, medical care—every threshold now charges admission. Even the road becomes a toll booth. For autistic people, and particularly for those of us asked to survive inside systems that already misread us, this is not simply stress. It is the lived reality of being told to plan for futures that were never designed to include us in the first place.
There is also a deeper autistic grief running underneath the whole series. Not just that the future becomes hard to imagine, but that many of us were never given enough mirrors or windows to know what kind of future would actually fit. When the sanctioned script collapses, there may be no reliable replacement—no culturally approved pathway, no stable script, no inherited map. That absence has consequences. It leaves behind grief for lost timelines, for deferred recognition, for careers built on self-erasure, for institutions that promised safety and delivered sorting instead. Part of what these essays and recordings have been doing is making room for that grief without pretending it is the end of the story. We cannot build honestly on top of false promises and call it hope.
And yet this series is not about despair. It is about refusing counterfeit hope. It is about seeing clearly, naming clearly, and asking what remains when institutional promises fail. If the official future will not hold, then perhaps the task is not to keep begging entry into it. Perhaps the task is to build smaller and truer—to make room for relational, local, communal forms of life that can actually sustain us. For me, that has meant writing as a form of delayed echolalia, as self-support, as script-making in a time without reliable scripts. It has also meant recognising the people who meet me there. When there are no mirrors and no windows, sometimes the work is to become one for each other—to make enough shared light that something livable can finally be seen.
If the future they sold us will not hold, then let it fail. We were never meant to survive by forcing ourselves into a shape built by systems that do not know us and do not love us. We survive by recognising one another, by telling the truth about what is happening, and by building what can actually hold.
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