
Lazy Saturday at home. This is #LexieCat — she‘s 4 years old and has very cute cow markings. She also loves to hunt her pink ball and makes loud hunting noises. #CatsofLitsy

Lazy Saturday at home. This is #LexieCat — she‘s 4 years old and has very cute cow markings. She also loves to hunt her pink ball and makes loud hunting noises. #CatsofLitsy

It turns out four years is long enough to burn out, get pushed into reinvention, learn you‘re autistic, build a new life (with the same wife and a few more cats), and still miss the gentle chaos of Litsy. I was #BookishMarginalia back then; I still am, just with better self-knowledge and a lot more joy. If we knew each other before, hi again. If not, I‘m glad we‘re starting fresh. I‘m now a self-employed writer & coach who still 🫶🏼 books!

"Autism's Lost Girls and Women have Long been overlooked, unrecognized, underdiagnosed, and left off the spectrum." This book explains how it happened and is a call to action to correct it, but a Cognitive Neuroscientist that says she was part of the problem and how she intents to improve research in the future. This book actually had me thinking about adults in my life and wondering if their tendencies are also attributed to undiagnosed...

Just got home from my youngest son‘s Reg‘l Ctr annual appt. The SW usually comes to us, but I thought it would be easier to go there. When we got home, he did not know where we were. Because it was not a normal place he goes, in that 2 hours (incl commute) he had become so disoriented I had to take his hand to lead him. It reminds me that my kids are the people this admin hates. I never have the privilege to be non-political.
#booksarepolitical

This book can be a really great resource and overview about Autism in women. It was informative and provided some great insight into how women were overlooked during research for so long, and the different ways that Autism presents in women. It would be a great resource for someone starting their journey into learning more about this topic.

I have had a rough time lately, mentally. I'm stressing about an upcoming certification exam. I've been sick for two weeks now with some respiratory virus. I've been getting garbage sleep. I've had to listen to deplorable people use their platform to disparage transgender, asexuals, anti-war protesters, immigrants, AmeriCorps, and people with autism. And I've spent way too much time on Facebook seeing people (or bots, who the f knows) celebrate.

It is possible to go into a bookstore without buying anything. I did today. I almost didn‘t. See. This looks interesting.

This is a very accessible book for people learning about ADHD and autism. It's casual, there's a lot of Internet speak, anecdotes, and it's very supportive.
It's a validating read if you are struggling with a diagnosis or starting to see you might be neurodivergent.
That's the extent of it. There's nothing new, or actionable. It was affirming.