In today’s chat with Cathy, we circled a familiar truth: for many autistic GLPs, the whole arrives before the parts. Recognition often begins in resonance, memory, and misreading—long before language catches up.
Here’s the link to my support script that I mentioned in the video.
Today’s conversation with Cathy ended up circling a truth I keep returning to: for many autistic, gestalt-oriented adults, understanding does not begin with explanation. It begins with contact. With pressure. With the felt whole of a thing arriving before any clean language for it exists. Cathy had asked me for “five things,” and what arrived in me was not five tidy bullet points but an entire weather front: a long support script, multiple related pieces, and the familiar flooding that happens when a prompt lands in the field and starts organising itself below conscious language. That became the first living example of the point itself. The whole comes first. Only later can the parts be pulled out.
From there, we talked about what it means to feel information before you can parse it. Not just language, but rooms, people, classrooms, requests, emotional tone, sensory charge—the entire ecology of a moment. I tried to name how a request, a classroom, or even a person can arrive already carrying every prior encounter, every stored pattern, every earlier strain or safety signal, all at once. Cathy kept returning to something she heard clearly in the support piece: that for many of us, the feel of a thing matters before the words do, and often more than the words do. That led us into a deeper conversation about trust—learning, especially later in life, to trust the body’s recognition when the official language arrives late or not at all.
A central thread was adult recognition. We spoke about how so many late-identified autistic and gestalt-oriented adults first encounter themselves not through diagnostic language, but through their children. A parent comes in trying to understand why their child is being misunderstood at school or in therapy, and suddenly realises—often with a kind of shock—that the architecture being described is their own. That felt important. Recognition often precedes vocabulary. People do not necessarily begin with the label. They begin with resonance. With the strange relief of finding a rhythm, an archive, or a body of language that feels like home before they yet know why.
We also touched the danger of frameworks that can only see gestalt processing in children. These children grow up. They become adults, colleagues, parents, writers, teachers, and late-identified survivors of educational and clinical misreading. If a model can only recognise the architecture in a clinic-room child, then it is not simply incomplete—it is mistaking a lifespan orientation for a temporary developmental anomaly. That was one of the strongest undercurrents of the conversation for me: the adults matter, not as an afterthought, but as evidence. The younglings become us.
Memory and recursion came in too, which felt especially alive. Cathy reflected back something she has noticed in my work: that my thinking, writing, and remembering do not move in neat sequence. They loop, recur, return, and gather. That opened the door for me to talk about writing—and Substack in particular—not simply as output, but as storage. As script. As a practical support for a nervous system that needs to place things somewhere stable enough to come back to later. Not a tidy archive in the institutional sense, but a script garden. A field of returns. A place where coherence can remain visible long enough to be recognised.
We also grounded the conversation in classroom life, which mattered to me. I spoke about being misread as “gifted” in childhood because I could draw, whilst what was actually happening was that image and pattern were carrying cognition before language could. Cathy made an important distinction there: that some children think in pictures, some in words, and some in both—but what matters is that schools and adults stop assuming only one valid route to meaning. That felt like a gentle but important bridge between lived autistic experience and educational practice. If we only honour the children who can show understanding in sanctioned forms, we will keep missing the actual architecture of learning.
What I appreciated most was that the conversation did not flatten into tips or diagnostics. It stayed with the deeper pattern: that whole-to-part is not just a speech profile in children. It is often a lifespan orientation. It shows up in how we read, how we remember, how we recognise ourselves, how we learn, how we write, how we return to unfinished meaning until it becomes speakable. The children in the caseload are not the only place this architecture lives. The adults are still doing it. We are doing it when we circle a truth for years before the right phrase lands. We are doing it when a book rotates a field we were already carrying. We are doing it when language arrives late, but true.
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