In this week’s conversation, Cathy and I explore the idea of “stage zero” in gestalt language development—language forming beneath the surface like a winter garden, where scripts gather through sensation, memory, and rhythm long before speech appears.
In today’s conversation, Cathy and I began by reflecting on the essays from the past week and the responses they had generated. The discussion centred on an idea that has been quietly forming in my recent writing: the notion of a “stage zero” in gestalt language development. Rather than proposing a clinical category, I described it as a way of noticing what is already happening before recognisable delayed echolalia appears—an underground season of language, more like winter in a garden than a developmental deficit. The metaphor of seasons helped frame the idea: stage one, where delayed echolalia becomes visible, resembles spring when shoots finally emerge, but winter is not empty. Beneath the soil, the bulbs are already alive and working.
From there we moved into the lived experience behind that metaphor. I spoke about childhood memories—particularly time spent with my grandmother—when I was absorbing language long before I could reliably respond with it. In a cultural environment where children were expected to be quiet, my delayed speech went largely unnoticed. Internally, though, language was accumulating as fragments of sound, rhythm, and feeling: scraps from television, phrases overheard in daily life, sensory triggers tied to memory. These pieces gathered like small stones in a pocket, chosen less for logic than for texture and resonance. Only much later would some of them become usable scripts.
A major theme of the conversation was the importance of organic language environments rather than performance-driven ones. I explained my concern that if speech is rewarded as a performance—something done to satisfy adults or meet behavioural targets—children may learn to produce the right words without the words being truly their own. I reflected on how this dynamic can appear in institutional contexts as well, where particular phrases or emotional scripts are rewarded because they signal compliance or recovery. That experience reinforced my conviction that authentic communication grows from safety and relationship, not from training programmes designed to elicit specific outputs.
We also touched on the deeper cognitive experience behind gestalt processing. For me, thought occurs not in language but in something more like sensation—pressure systems, weather patterns, fields of meaning that must later be translated into words. Language becomes a kind of translation labour, compressing something expansive into a much smaller container. Over time I have learned to do this translation more clearly through writing, but it remains effortful. The seasonal metaphor returns here as well: long periods of internal activity precede the visible bloom of expression.
By the end of the conversation, Cathy reflected on how these descriptions resonate with what clinicians often observe when working with young gestalt processors: the earliest signs of language are present long before they appear externally as recognisable speech. We paused there for the week, with the sense that this emerging framework—script gardens, seasonal development, and the quiet labour of translation—will continue unfolding in the essays to come.
The AutSide is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.
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