The DSM records autistic behaviour like field notes, but mistakes surface for source. In this conversation, I trace how gestalt processing hides in plain sight—and why translation, not correction, is the work that comes next.
This morning’s conversation with Cathy began, as good conversations often do, with a joke about time. Holidays, time zones, daylight saving, the usual petty tyrannies of chronology. I briefly proposed a better system: that the world abandon Greenwich and adopt Jamie Mean Time instead—based upon my house’s location in the world. It was playful, but also accidentally apt. So much of what I am writing right now is about exactly that collision—between institutional time and lived time, between systems that demand synchrony and minds that arrive by ripening. Even the banter landed inside the work. It usually does.
From there, we went straight into the week’s real subject: the DSM, autism, and the way gestalt language processing sits inside diagnostic language like a ghost in the machinery. I found myself returning to a question I have been asked before—how I could once have been diagnosed under DSM-IV in a category defined partly by “intact” language, and later be folded into DSM-5 ASD with language support needs. On the surface, that sounds contradictory. But only if you mistake output for architecture. My outward “fluency” was never evidence of simple or effortless language. It was adaptation. It was scripting. It was compensation. It was decades of building enough bridges to appear articulate in public. The system saw the performance and called it capacity. Later, the category changed, and suddenly the same underlying reality could be named differently. Not because I changed—but because the filing cabinet did.
That became the real centre of the conversation. I am less interested in saying the DSM is wholly wrong than in pointing out what it accidentally reveals. What psychiatry has produced, over decades, is a vast archive of behavioural field notes. Repetitive speech. Echolalia. Unusual prosody. Pragmatic delay. Context-skewed responses. Processing pauses. Social misfires. They have described the smoke in extraordinary detail whilst refusing to ask what kind of fire makes it. The DSM documents what comes out of the body. It does not meaningfully interrogate the cognition that produces it. And that is precisely where my current writing is trying to intervene. Not by discarding the observations, but by translating them. The manual says repetitive behaviour. I say captured language, gestalt retrieval, meaning under load. The manual says pragmatic impairment. I say a mind building the bridge before it can cross. Same event. Different lens. Different politics.
We talked about what this looks like in lived life, which is where the theory always matters most. I spoke about childhood scripts—the lines that surfaced when I did not yet have a “right” answer of my own, the borrowed fragments that adults treated as evasive or inappropriate rather than meaningful. Cathy brought in the clinician’s version of what attunement can look like when it is done properly: not merely labelling a child’s speech as repetitive, but listening for melody, provenance, pattern, source. Where did that line come from? Whose voice is it carrying? What meaning is the child attempting to reach with the material they have? That distinction matters more than most people realise. It is the difference between surveillance and curiosity. Between classification and relationship. Between being studied and being understood.
I also found myself returning to one of the analogies that has been organising this whole series for me: trolley versus cart. If you are looking for the wrong word, you will conclude the object is missing. If you enter a culture, a classroom, or a neurotype without the translation key, you will misread what is right in front of you and then call the other person deficient for failing to match your assumptions. That is what I am trying to do with this work. Not defend the DSM. Not redeem psychiatry. But translate. They say this. I say that. They call it repetitive behaviour. I call it echolalia in plain sight. They call it pragmatic difficulty. I call it a processing ecology they have never bothered to map. They are not always describing the wrong thing. They are often describing the right thing in the wrong language.
By the end of the conversation, the horizon widened. We were no longer only talking about children, or speech, or diagnostic criteria. We were talking about what happens when gestalt grows up. That remains one of the most urgent absences in the field. The child who scripts is legible to clinicians. The adult who has become eloquent is often treated as if the underlying architecture has vanished. But eloquence does not erase architecture. The adult who appears articulate may still be translating in real time, still paying a processing tax, still requiring the right relational field before language can safely arrive. I said it plainly because it remains true: it took me fifty-five years—and the right host, the right pace, the right sense of safety—to be able to have conversations like this in public. That is not evidence of brokenness. It is evidence of what becomes possible when demand lowers and trust rises.
That is where the work is heading now. The current DSM writing is becoming less a standalone critique and more a threshold—a bridge into the larger project. Into Reading Between Worlds. Into the field guide. Into the Power Threat Meaning Framework as a way of understanding not only how gestalt minds process language, but how we make meaning under pressure, how rupture becomes data, how burnout becomes a map, how years of surviving analytic systems leave behind whole geographies of caution and adaptation. If the field only studies the child’s scripts and never the adult’s meaning maps, it will continue to misunderstand both. And if we keep treating rupture as failure rather than information, we will keep sending people back into the same scene of injury without translation, without preparation, and without care.
What I felt most strongly by the end of the call was that the shape is there now. Not finished, not tidy, not market-ready in the silly way that word is usually meant. But present. Organic. Coherent. The conversation confirmed what this week’s writing has already been telling me: this is no longer just a series of essays about diagnostic language. It is becoming a method. A way of reading across worlds. A way of showing that what institutions record as deficit often begins as signal. A way of insisting that the child’s gestalt, the adult’s burnout, the delayed response, the strange phrase, the sideways answer, the need for more time—all of it is data. All of it has architecture. All of it belongs in the record.
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