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The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism ebook

by Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenberg


Writer and artist Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg tells a powerful story of life, love, struggle, and joy as she discovers her place on the autism spectrum at the age of 50. The author received her bachelor's and master's degrees in English from the University of California at Berkeley.

Writer and artist Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg tells a powerful story of life, love, struggle, and joy as she discovers her place on the autism spectrum at the age of 50. After many busy years as a technical writer and a homeschooling mother, she now lives a quiet life in rural Vermont, where she writes and publishes the blogs Journeys with Autism (journeyswithautism. com), Sojourning in the Visual World (sojournerartist. com), and Autism and Empathy (autismandempathy.

The Uncharted Path book. You may already be familiar with Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg as the blog author of Journeys with Autism. Even if you aren’t, I would highly recommend reading this compelling memoir of her life. Jul 13, 2010 Scott rated it it was amazing.

Blazing My Trail is the sequel to The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism, Ms. Cohen-Rottenberg's moving memoir about her childhood on the autism spectrum and her life after diagnosis as an adult. In this latest work, the author chronicles her process of creatively adapting to life with a disability, advocating for full inclusion, and reclaiming her independence, her power, and her engagement with the world.

According to Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg, author of The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism . Disability metaphors are connected to discrimination.

According to Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg, author of The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism, Disability metaphors abound in our culture, and they exist almost entirely as pejoratives. Disability metaphors encourage prejudice. Read on the Scribd mobile app. Download the free Scribd mobile app to read anytime, anywhere.

Cheap Textbook Rental for The Uncharted Path: My Journey with . by Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenber.

Cheap Textbook Rental for The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism by Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenber 9780984138807, Save up to 90% and get free return shipping.

The uncharted path is an autism biography like none I've ever read. Unlike similar books, Rachel's main journey takes place during adulthood. The book certainly covers Rachel's childhood but it's clear that the main changes occurred much later in her life.

Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenberg05 September 2014. Blazing My Trail is the sequel to The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism, Ms.

Writer and artist Rachel Cohen-Rottenberg tells a powerful story of life, love, struggle, and joy as she discovers her place on the autism spectrum at the age of 50. The author received her bachelor's and master's degrees in English from the University of California at Berkeley. After many busy years as a technical writer and a homeschooling mother, she now lives a quiet life in rural Vermont, where she writes and publishes the blogs Journeys with Autism (journeyswithautism.com), Sojourning in the Visual World (sojournerartist.com), and Autism and Empathy (autismandempathy.com).
Samardenob
Rachel's book is an insightful gem that gives us glimpses into her life from early childhood to adulthood showing decades of struggles before she is diagnosed. She survives her possibly, autistic father's harsh, abusive temper and her mother's controlling ways. Elementary school's social challenges are overcome by the game of baseball and being a "tough tomboy." High school is harder as she sees herself "outside the social bubble," yet again, until she finds her niche. This time it is her gift for music along with the ability to mimic others that saves her. Rachel acknowledges that analyzing social situations and figuring out human motivations has become a favorite pastime that along with list making is a survival strategy.

She continues to use these strategies through her college and graduate school years where she develops severe insomnia. This is managed with medication and Rachel goes on to have a successful career as a technical writer. She meets her first husband at a company softball game; they are married two years later. Rachel joyfully becomes a mother two years after this. Once again her organized lists and determination help her to be a good parent while working around an inability to take part in loud and crowded activities with her daughter. Rachel continues to do well even homeschooling her daughter while working from home.

However, the effort it takes to overcome abuse from her childhood, ignore her sensory issues, and work at social situations finally takes its toll a few years after she divorces and remarries. Increased sensitivity to her environment causes a temporary home bound status while she and her husband strategize to find solutions. Rachel's determination again pulls her through this, and she finally reaches a place of acceptance of who she is and becomes an advocate and inspiration for those on the autism spectrum.

The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism
Rolorel
there are so many deeply familiar moments in this book. if you're on the spectrum---if you love someone on the spectrum---i'd definitely recommend you read this. you won't only know what one woman's life is like: you'll most likely have a greater clarity about your own.

it's one thing to have a view of AS and autism from the perspective of someone seeing it from the outside. works by parents, teachers, and various experts in the field are often informative, at times essential. but these still represent a view from the outside. the internal dimension---the rich inner world---are often absent. also absent is a first-hand account of what it's like to move through an external world that definitely ticks at a different pace from one's own.

all of that is here. the author shies from nothing. she deals with everything from sensory issues to meltdown to social anxiety in clear, honest anecdotes from her own life. the end result it's a three-dimensional image of these experiences from the inside-out. in the thoroughness and honesty is a sense of connection--the reader no longer feels alone. it's easy to find one's self saying: "i'm really not the only one in the world who does that; i'm not the only one who thinks or feels that."

even more important: the assertion that underneath almost every challenge is a strength.

that's the heart of this book for me: underneath the sensory issues are a deeply textured world. underneath the social anxiety is a craving for connection and directness (or honesty.) these are not bad qualities to have, and can be transformed to creativity and a turning towards community.

this is what the author has done. you follow her journey from a (mystifying) sense of difference to one of self-recognition and reaching out to others. there's a sense of shared celebration in that, and of a definite hopefulness for one's own life.

in short: this is an important book, not one to be passed up.
JoJolar
I have read several books about Asperger's Disorder and they were very clinical and factual. Rachel's book has gone beyond that and helped me see the personal side of the story - the self talk, the anxiety, the social misinterpretations, the sensory overload. Her engaging, easy to read book explains problems she's encountered and solutions that have worked for her. Her explanations of everyday situations that just got completely out of control for her are excellent first-hand accounts of austitic experience and offer essential insights for people raising austistic children. She also lists several types of sensory stims that I had never considered before - just because you don't flap your hands and rock back and forth doesn't mean you aren't stimming. This book is very informative and personal at the same time. I highly recommend it.
Tolrajas
When my own Asperger's diagnosis at age 34 sent me searching for others like me, I found Rachel's inspiring, moving and often funny blog. While I am still searching for the words to explain what it feels like to suddenly discover as an adult that I am Autistic, Rachel has found those words and shared them in this very personal book. Rachel provides an inside look at redefining the way we communicate with the neurotypical world and learning to self-advocate. If you're recently diagnosed, or know someone who is, or suspect you are or do -- read this book instead of (or in addition to) the clinical analysis written by the "experts" who have studied Autism rather than living with it.
The Uncharted Path: My Journey with Late-Diagnosed Autism ebook
Author:
Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenberg
Subcat:
EPUB size:
1950 kb
FB2 size:
1373 kb
DJVU size:
1127 kb
Language:
Publisher:
Rachel B. Cohen-Rottenberg (2010)
Pages:
267 pages
Rating:
4.3
Other formats:
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