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Too Loud, Too Bright, Too Fast: A Personal Account of Sensory Overload and How It Shapes the Autistic Experience (eBook)
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Too Loud, Too Bright, Too Fast: A Personal Account of Sensory Overload and How It Shapes the Autistic Experience (eBook)
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Claudette M. Mohr
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Claudette M. Mohr
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Prezzo:
€ 18,49
Compra EPUB
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Prezzo:
€ 18,49
Compra EPUB
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Formato :
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EPUB |
Cloud:
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Sì Scopri di più |
Compatibilità:
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Tutti i dispositivi
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Lingua:
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en |
Editore:
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F. Hems |
Codice EAN:
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9798230740889 |
Anno pubblicazione:
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2025 |
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Chiudi
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Descrizione
This book moves through the day-to-day life of someone who lives in a world where fluorescent lights don't simply illuminate—they pierce. Where a passing siren doesn't signal alarm—it paralyzes. Where even the comfort of a sweater can feel like sandpaper on skin. It documents what it means to wake up every morning with your senses tuned to a higher frequency, and how that affects your decisions, your relationships, your sense of safety, and your ability to belong.
It doesn't attempt to speak for all autistic people, nor does it reduce a multifaceted condition to a set of neatly explained symptoms. Instead, it tells one personal story with unwavering honesty, showing how sensory overload weaves its way through moments both quiet and chaotic. From grocery store aisles that feel like battlegrounds to well-meaning conversations that become endurance tests, this account refuses to soften the reality. It honors the everyday negotiations, the compromises, the intense awareness that comes with a heightened nervous system in a society that rarely stops to lower its volume.
The experience of being autistic often includes an invisible battle. One where lights glare brighter, background noise becomes foreground, and seemingly small stimuli stack up until the nervous system says, "Enough." The book takes you into that space—into the build-up and fallout of sensory meltdowns, the strategic calculations behind simple outings, and the quiet relief found in environments that offer even a hint of softness or predictability.
At its core, the story is not just about overstimulation. It's about what that overstimulation does to identity. It shows how a person begins to second-guess their own reactions, wondering if they're "too sensitive" or "too much." It explores how sensory pain, when dismissed or misunderstood, becomes emotional pain. The writing doesn't apologize for these feelings. It doesn't package them as quirks or obstacles to overcome. It allows them to stand in their full complexity.
The author recounts childhood moments where clothing tags and lunchroom noise became overwhelming, not because of immaturity or misbehavior, but because the world lacked the language and patience to understand what was happening. These experiences accumulate into a lifetime of adapting, suppressing, and eventually learning to listen to the body's signals rather than hide them. There's power in that shift—from shame to ownership.
For autistic readers, the book offers validation in a society that too often demands justification. It says: yes, that moment was hard. Yes, that reaction made sense. It resists the idea that everything must be explained in neurotypical terms to be taken seriously. It provides language where there may have only been feelings. It affirms that sensory pain is real and worthy of consideration.
This is not a guidebook and does not pretend to be an authority on all things autism. It is, instead, a personal narrative with professional grace. The writing is steady, thoughtful, and infused with an emotional intelligence that respects both the reader and the experience being shared. It doesn't demand sympathy—it earns understanding. It doesn't sanitize discomfort—it examines it carefully and, at times, unflinchingly.
Through its carefully crafted storytelling, the book builds a bridge. One side is rooted in lived experience. The other is an open invitation to notice what so often goes unseen. It reveals the emotional landscape that sensory overload shapes—one filled with courage, restraint, awareness, and resilience. In doing so, it makes a strong case: the world isn't too loud, too bright, or too fast because autistic people are weak. It's because the systems, environments, and social norms have never been designed with them in mind.
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