The Reason I Jump: A Book by a 13-Year-Old Boy with Autism
"The thirteen-year-old author of this book invites you, his reader, to
imagine a daily life in which your faculty of speech is taken away.
Explaining that you're hungry, or tired, or in pain, is now as beyond
your powers as a chat with a friend. I'd like to push the
thought-experiment a little further. Now imagine that after you lose
your ability to communicate, the editor-in-residence who orders your
thoughts walks out without notice. The chances are that you never knew
this mind-editor existed, but now that he or she has gone, you realize
too late how the editor allowed your mind to function for all these
years. A dam-burst of ideas, memories, impulses and thoughts is
cascading over you, unstoppably. Your editor controlled this flow,
diverting the vast majority away, and recommending just a tiny number
for your conscious consideration. But now you're on your own. Now your
mind is a room where twenty radios, all tuned to different stations, are
blaring out voices and music. The radios have no off-switches or volume
controls, the room you're in has no door or window, and relief will
come only when you're too exhausted to stay awake." Writer David
Mitchell shares more in this introduction to his son Naoki Higashida's
extraordinary first book, "The Reason I Jump"
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