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The Human Rubric: A Memoir of Life in a Neurotypical World
Coles
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The Human Rubric: A Memoir of Life in a Neurotypical World in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $11.99
Original price: $13.99

Coles
The Human Rubric: A Memoir of Life in a Neurotypical World in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $11.99
Original price: $13.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
A memoir of autism, masking, and belonging by a clinical psychologist.
Why would a person learn to treat love, safety, and belonging as a problem to solve
Again and again, a young man misreads social situations and learns the rules only after the punishment: exclusion, embarrassment, lost chances, distance. Can he break down human behaviour piece by piece, to reverse-engineer a life that might lead to belonging?
His search shapes everything - friendship, love, work, and ambition - and eventually leads him to professional training as a clinical psychologist.
He spent decades trying to fix something, only to realise that what he was looking at was never broken in the first place.
In trying to be normal, he loses himself. What he finds instead is that love is still love, even when it is shown and felt differently.
A memoir of autism, masking, and belonging by a clinical psychologist.
Why would a person learn to treat love, safety, and belonging as a problem to solve
Again and again, a young man misreads social situations and learns the rules only after the punishment: exclusion, embarrassment, lost chances, distance. Can he break down human behaviour piece by piece, to reverse-engineer a life that might lead to belonging?
His search shapes everything - friendship, love, work, and ambition - and eventually leads him to professional training as a clinical psychologist.
He spent decades trying to fix something, only to realise that what he was looking at was never broken in the first place.
In trying to be normal, he loses himself. What he finds instead is that love is still love, even when it is shown and felt differently.


















