Our Differences Are Superpowers Beyond the Dis in Disability

[Music]

[Applause]

merriam-webster divides as

defines a superhero as being a fictional

character

having extraordinary or superhuman

powers

but it also defines a superhero as being

an extremely skillful

or successful person

spider-man is one of the most popular

superheroes

peter parker aka spider-man

was bitten by a spider and that’s how he

became different

he probably already felt different he

was an orphan living with his aunt and

uncle

he was a teenager teenagers all feel

different

and he didn’t have much money but that

bite

that spider bite is what really made him

different

it took him out of the norm

by being different he also gained

superpowers

he became a super version of himself and

he became

a superhero i believe like peter parker

if we embrace our differences we can all

be superheroes

i’ve met and worked with so many people

over the years

who use their differences as their

superpowers

especially people with neurodiversity

like adhd

dyslexia learning differences and autism

they use their differences to change

this world

and it’s amazing

i want to tell you about a few real live

superheroes

the first one is my friend john john

is an amazing guy he founded a tech

company

that he runs with several partners he

has a wonderful wife

he has wonderful children he’s really

like he has the perfect life if y’all

met him

you would be amazed at this life that he

has built for himself

he’s also very kind and he’s very bright

john’s a mentor for my business and when

i told him about the software that i

developed

that helps employees with neurodiversity

get the support they need in the

workplace

he was super excited about it he said he

was so passionate about it because he

has adhd

i didn’t know this about john and then

he shocked me when he told me he was

ashamed of having

adhd he said betsy please don’t tell

anyone that i have adhd

because i’m so ashamed of it and i

thought you know

we need to change that because while i

think his

brain does work differently because of

his adhd

i think it’s his superpower he can

multitask like nobody else you’ve ever

seen

he gets a ton done he also thinks

outside the box sometimes i call that

thinking out so far outside the box that

you don’t know where the box was

he’s so creative and he is doing he’s

developing technology that’s

literally changing our world he’s not

limited by being in the norm

another one of my friends is named

charlotte charlotte has severe dyslexia

she didn’t learn to read until she was

in the fifth grade

in elementary school charlotte felt

different and she felt less

she was struggling academically and

while she knew she was smart

because she couldn’t read she was

falling further and further behind

every year her mom also knew she was

smart

and extremely creative so they pushed

for a diagnosis

of dyslexia they found the best tutors

and therapists

and charlotte ultimately did learn to

read

she did great in middle and high school

but

in college she struggled again to the

point

of becoming suicidal

luckily for charlotte she went to a

small liberal arts school

really similar to austin college and

there she got the support that she

needed

she asked for accommodations she worked

harder than

all of her peers and she ultimately

regained her confidence

she worked in the financial world for a

couple of years then she went

back to grad school and she’s now a

serial entrepreneur

besides running her own company she also

mentors

and works with other startups developing

not just her own products

but helping other people develop amazing

creative

technology that is again changing our

world

let me introduce myself i’m betsy furler

graduated from austin college in 1989

[Music]

and you may think how am i different

and i look pretty normal in fact some

people kind of think i’m the

perfect person that does fit inside that

box called the norm

but let me tell you about myself i’m

really far from normal

and i’m far from perfect i was however

i guess i should say i am however a

member of

the best sorority at austin college

kappa gamma kai

proud and purple i also went to the best

liberal arts school

austin college

i have a graduate degree from a well

thought of institution

i love fashion and i’m always dressed up

but i’m a woman in tech and that sets me

apart from the norm

i also have characteristics of dyslexia

and adhd putting me in the neurodiverse

category

and i want to talk just a little bit

about

neurodiversity because you know when we

think about it we’re probably

all neurodiverse even if you aren’t

diagnosed with a specific condition

the chances are your brain does not work

the same way as other people’s brains do

that’s what makes us all special that’s

what makes us all different

and that’s what the world needs is our

for us to embrace all those differences

as our superpowers but now back to me

so i can’t tell my left from my right

if you ask me to give you directions

when you’re driving

i will tell you to turn the wrong way

just ask my friend v

but i can read maps really really well

i’m

also mult i’m a multi-tasker and i

multitask

just a little too much i’m frequently

just a little bit late and i am

buried in a pile of emails right now

that i will never probably get out of

but

i’m incredibly efficient and productive

i am the mom of a child with a

life-threatening chronic illness

but i’m also the mom of a highly

competitive skeet shooter

i have lots of friends but i’m not

always a good friend

i only speak english i am that american

that only knows one language and i’ve

never lived outside the state of texas

i’m complicated we’re all complicated

we’re all different and we can when we

can embrace those

differences as our superpowers we can

take on the world

i want to talk a little bit more about

neurodiversity

30 percent of people are diagnosed with

a

neurodiverse condition like adhd

dyslexia learning differences or autism

but a hundred percent of us have

cognitive

changes during our years

our months our weeks and our days

whether you have a major event like a

stroke

or an injury or an illness or a life

change

like having a baby and not getting

enough sleep

or a daily cognitive change from too

little sleep

too little coffee or too much alcohol

we all have cognitive differences

challenges

and changes yet

our society stigmatizes those whose

brains work differently from

the norm literally no one can meet that

standard

so why we always see these cognitive

differences

as a disability i believe we should see

them all

as a superpower using

the way our brain works in its unique

way and its

unique strengths makes us all stronger

and makes our society stronger

it’s dangerous and limiting to think of

people in a group as all the same

we frequently group people by their race

gender sexual orientation or what groups

they belong to

and thinking that someone of a specific

group is the same as everyone in that

group

is dangerous it limits that person

and it limits you when you don’t embrace

your own differences and their

differences

a child in school may struggle

academically but see numbers in a way

that nobody else can one boy i work with

has autism he’s in a special ed

classroom in a high school

and he’s considered severely disabled

but this guy processes numbers

in a way you can’t believe he knows

everyone’s birth date

and if you give him a specific year he

can tell you

instantly how old you were during that

year

he also knows hundreds of countries

their flags and where they are in the

world

he has amazing strengths but yet

we define him by his disability

and don’t allow him to use those

strengths

for the benefit of himself and society

by limiting him we’re limiting all of us

some people are twice exceptional or 2e

people who are 2e have either a

cognitive difference or a disability

and academic giftedness

their superpowers of their cognitive

difference

and their academic giftedness are also

often devalued

because they think work and learn

differently

yet they are our true superheroes they

are the people who are going to make

innovations who are going to change this

world

by looking at them as having

disabilities

and differences as less rather than just

different

we’re all losing out some of you in this

room are probably 2e

embrace your superpowers

our society loses out on the most

valuable people

and we lose out on the most valuable

pieces of ourselves

by not embracing our differences

i believe as we embrace our own

differences and acknowledge the fact

that we are not normal we can also

acknowledge the fact

that other people’s differences are the

most valuable pieces of them

and the thing that gives them the gives

the most to society

we deflate our kids early in the

educational process

because we judge them by how well they

read

how that well they can attend or sit

still

and by whether or not they can memorize

facts and regurgitate them on the test

we lose out on their strengths

on their abilities on their natural

gifts

by defining them in this way we lose out

by diagnosing them with a disability and

seeing their differences

as a weakness and making them feel as

less

this then follows people into the

workplace

where employees are frequently placed in

a job

not based on their unique strengths

but often actually against their

strengths

and then they’re constantly working

against their weaknesses

rather than working towards their

strengths

small changes can make huge differences

imagine a world where in workplaces

employees are surveyed for what they do

well

what they like doing and how they like

to work

imagine an educational system where

children are educated to their

individual differences

to all children’s individual differences

where they are valued for their

strengths where they

are allowed to dream their dreams where

they feel good about themselves

and empowered to also accept their own

differences

as we accept our differences as

superpowers

we can all be superheroes

remember the definition of a superhero

merriam-webster says that a superhero is

a fictional character having

extraordinary or superhuman powers

like spider-man but it also says a

superhero

is an exceptionally skillful or

successful person

we all are superheroes when we embrace

our differences

and the differences of others

maya angelou says if you’re always

trying to be normal

you will never know how amazing you will

be

go out embrace your superpowers

and the superpowers of others and make a

difference

in our world

my talk today is in memory of my friend

dean

dean used his neurodiversity to be a

superhero

to others to help them learn and connect

and he is a true superhero gone from

this world

way too soon thank you