A conversation on Boolean logic, gestalt processing, script gardens, Sukhareva, queerness, and the professional humility required when meaning arrives whole before it can be segmented.
Today’s conversation with Cathy began with the true/false Boolean piece, but the real centre of gravity was not Boole himself. It was the assumption Boole inherits: that meaning begins once a proposition can be stated, sorted, tested, declared true or false. What I tried to name is that, for me, this is already too late. The whole has already arrived. The field has already cohered. Meaning has already happened before the sentence can be broken apart and submitted to logic.
That became a conversation about gestalt processing more broadly, and about the professional temptation to treat scripts as objects to decode rather than ecologies to enter. Cathy spoke about a young person whose parent had always understood the script garden growing in her child, even when professionals told her she was reading too much into it. That mattered. The parent was not inventing meaning. She was attuned to it before the official categories could see it. The professionals who helped most were not the ones who defended their training most fiercely, but the ones willing to let the young person’s processing reorganise the room.
From there, we moved into writing, school, and the violence of premature segmentation. A child who writes the same line over and over may not be refusing the assignment. They may be preserving the only whole they have access to. They may not yet be able to break the gestalt apart without losing the meaning it carries. When pressure is added—explain it, justify it, tell me what you mean—the relational field can collapse in seconds. Then the child is called avoidant, defiant, behavioural. The system mistakes protection for refusal.
We also turned toward Sukhareva, not merely as a missing name in autism history, but as evidence of a different premise. What changes when autistic children are approached as people whose participation, development, relationships, and futures matter? What changes when the work is not classification for exclusion, but support for belonging? That question sits uneasily beside the Western histories of patriarchy, capitalism, eugenics, and the long refusal to see autistic girls and women at all.
Queerness entered the conversation there—not as an analogy pasted onto language, but as a method of troubling the box before the box becomes law. Why this role? Why that category? Why this script and not that one? Why must relation, colour, movement, pleasure, cartoon, repetition, brightness, softness, childhood, adulthood, gender, language, and thought obey the same narrow logic of permission? Gestalt processing asks a similar question of language: what if the whole is not an error waiting to be corrected, but the first true form of the meaning?
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