There are many films that focus on autism, but very few films focus on the real plight of this group rather than some special high-functioning patients with stories in this group. For example, the Rain Man who can count out matches, the ear who finally won the Nobel Prize. This is good, but it will make people mistakenly think that this is the real life of all autistic patients because of the availability bias. "There are two kinds of people in this world, one is those who care about us, the other is people who don't care about us, the former is the absolute minority, and the latter is the overwhelming majority." They are indeed different from others and therefore isolated. outside of normal. But whether this normality is a barrier that we draw, we can realize the circle drawn for women, we can realize the circle drawn for minority groups, but we are not aware of the circle drawn for autistic patients. Sadly, with cognitive abilities so low below the horizon, they have a hard time realizing this discrimination. What is normal? Do we sometimes pay too much attention to normality, so that what was originally abnormal becomes normal, so the scope of normal is getting smaller and smaller, and those that were normal have become abnormal. Is this normal? Saw an interesting short comment, you allow paranoid people to exist, but why don't you tolerate me when I'm extremely paranoid? Where are the boundaries of the standard, who decides. The first answer that springs to mind seems to be an authority like a hospital. They decide whether patients stay or not and whether they can get effective treatment, which of course is the driving force, I do not deny it. But what about everyone? The family of an autistic person, the girl in the laundry, the furious cook. Can they have some empathy and have more patience? Instead of imposing standardized punishment on everyone like Yang Yongxin, be more tolerant.
In fact, the standard that determines normality is probably the empathy and patience of each of us :)
View more about The Specials reviews