This video introduces The Wrong Reader—a series on therapy, misreading, and autistic jeopardy. Not content, but script garden: a warning, an offering, and a record from inside the weather system of being read wrong.
This morning’s video is less a conventional introduction than a threshold note—a quarter turn before the next doorway opens. I begin by thanking the many new readers and listeners who have found their way here, and by naming how much it matters when someone doesn’t simply consume the work, but recognises themselves in it. Those moments of resonance matter to me because they confirm what I have long suspected: that what so often gets treated as idiosyncratic or excessive in autistic, gestalt, or otherwise marginalised lives is often shared—just rarely named aloud.
From there, I make something plain that feels increasingly important to say in a culture that flattens everything into “content.” The AutSide and Sensual Residue are not content pipelines. They are not engineered for clicks, virality, or market logic. They are, for me, a kind of externalised script garden—a place where delayed understanding can land safely when it finally arrives. As a gestalt processor with significant support needs around language, I often do not have the answer in the moment. Sometimes the answer comes the next day, or the next week, or much later. Writing is how I preserve what would otherwise be lost. The archive is not branding. It is accommodation, memory, and survival.
The heart of the video is an introduction to the new series, The Wrong Reader. I explain that this series emerges from a deeply personal and politically charged question: what happens when an autistic gestalt mind enters therapy and is misread from the start? I reflect on the profound risks built into that first encounter—especially when seemingly simple questions like How do you feel right now? are anything but simple for someone living inside layered time, multiple simultaneous “nows,” somatic memory, and delayed linguistic processing. What is framed as a neutral intake can quickly become a site of surveillance, misclassification, coercion, or even legal jeopardy.
I also name the deeper problem: therapy is never just a private room between two people. It is shaped by professional training, diagnostic assumptions, institutional liability, mandated reporting structures, and increasingly by the logic of private capital. A clinician may present as affirming, but if they do not understand gestalt processing, autistic cognition, or the cultural and bodily realities I carry into the room, then the “fit” may already be broken before the conversation even begins. This new series sits inside that tension. It asks what it means to seek care in systems built to read quickly, categorise prematurely, and default to the limits of their own frameworks.
Throughout the video, I frame the series as both warning and offering. It is heavy, honest, and at times painful. It draws on my own therapeutic history, including moments of being read incorrectly, funnelled toward the wrong interventions, or treated through models that were never designed for minds like mine. But it is also meant to function as a script garden for others—for my children, for autistic readers, for anyone who has ever walked into a room needing help and realised too late that the room did not know how to read them. If the system insists on first contact without scripts, then part of what I am building here is a way to enter with some.
I also reflect on form. I explain why there will be no AI-generated summaries for this series, why the poems will be narrated but the pieces themselves allowed to stand whole, and why I continue to distrust tools that impose guardrails where nuance, tenderness, or danger need to remain intact. The series is written from inside the weather system, not from outside it. It is autotheory and autoethnography in the strongest sense: not a detached commentary on autistic life, but a record from within the storm itself.
By the end, I return to gratitude—but with clarity. I thank readers and subscribers sincerely, and I name the material truth that their support has sometimes paid for groceries, equipment, and the practical conditions that make this work possible. But I also insist, gently and firmly, that this is not a business machine. There is no content team, no strategy apparatus, no polished funnel. There is just me—writing, recording, preserving, and leaving behind what I may one day need again. The video itself becomes part of that archive: not a performance, but another script left in the garden.
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