A conversation about belonging, language, and meaning-making. From autistic community to reading comprehension, we explore what becomes possible when people are understood on their own terms rather than measured by performance.
Today’s conversation felt so coherent because it was not really about three separate topics. Community, comprehension, and communication kept collapsing into one another. Each became both cause and consequence of the others. The discussion repeatedly returned to a central idea: communication flourishes when it is held inside a community that offers enough safety for genuine comprehension to emerge.
Core Themes
1. Communication as access, not performance
The conversation began with communication, but quickly moved beyond speaking itself. I kept returning to something that has shaped much of my life: the difference between having thoughts and having access to the language needed to share them.
I rarely experience meaning as a sequence. I experience the whole first. The challenge has never been a lack of thought. The challenge has been finding a route from the whole of something to the parts that make it intelligible to other people.
Looking back across speech therapy, testimony in court, public speaking, media appearances, voice coaching, and now podcasting, the common thread is not communication difficulty alone. It is the pressure to alter oneself in order to be understood. For much of my life, communication felt like translation rather than expression.
2. Community as relational safety
The discussion of Cathy’s interview of Libby Hill on her Give Me 5 podcast led naturally into questions of community.
What struck me most about that conversation was not agreement. It was recognition. Autism was being discussed from the inside rather than from the outside. It was not being pathologised. It was being lived.
That distinction matters.
Community is not simply a collection of people who share a diagnosis or identity. Community is the space where experience becomes legitimate knowledge. It is where people stop explaining themselves as evidence and begin speaking as participants.
Much of my own journey—from a late autism diagnosis, through discovering gestalt processing, through finding Marge, Cathy, and so many others—has been a movement from isolation toward belonging. The internet did not replace community. It made community possible.
3. Comprehension as meaning-making
The conversation spent considerable time exploring reading comprehension, and I found myself returning to a question that has followed me through much of my teaching career:
What do we actually mean when we say someone understands?
Schools often define comprehension as recall. Can you identify the main idea? Can you cite evidence? Can you answer the questions correctly?
But that is not how comprehension appears in my experience.
Comprehension begins long before explanation. It begins with relationship. It begins with noticing.
That is why I keep returning to the framework of three reads:
* First read: entering the field of the story and experiencing the relationships within it.
* Second read: noticing patterns, repetitions, tensions, and shifts.
* Third read: asking what the story is saying now, to this reader, at this moment in their life.
The origins of that framework are not academic. They come from sitting beside my grandmother whilst she read aloud and thought aloud. Reading was never a race. It was participation in meaning.
4. Kairos and Kronos
Running beneath the entire conversation was the tension between depth and speed.
Cathy spoke about young children who want to hear the same book again and again, moving through the entire experience from beginning to end. I found myself recognising something familiar there.
Many educational systems prioritise coverage. More books. More standards. More measurable outcomes. More pace.
But understanding often emerges differently.
The pattern has to settle. The relationship has to form. Meaning has to accumulate.
What matters is not how quickly a learner arrives at understanding but whether understanding arrives at all.
Again and again I find myself choosing Kairos over Kronos—depth over pace, experience over completion.
5. Teaching as relationship
The conversation eventually widened into a discussion about curriculum, literature, and teaching itself.
I keep finding myself asking a simple question:
Who are the students sitting in front of me?
Not what should they know by June. Not what does the pacing guide require. Not what text do I personally love.
Who are they?
What meanings have they already made? What experiences are they bringing into the room? What relationships do they have with the topics we are asking them to encounter?
Teaching comprehension is not simply delivering content. It is meeting learners where they already are and helping them build meaning from there.
The Thread Beneath the Threads
The conversation was framed around community, comprehension, and communication.
But underneath all three was something else.
Permission.
Permission to communicate without performance.
Permission to belong without masking.
Permission to make meaning before producing evidence.
Permission to understand something before having the words to explain it.
The three C’s kept circling back to the same place.
Much of human flourishing begins when people are finally allowed to be understood on their own terms.
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