Why Being Neurodiverse Can Make you a Brilliant Entrepreneur

Transcriber: Leonardo Silva
Reviewer: Rhonda Jacobs

Hi.

I’m G.

I’m queer.

I’m nonbinary.

I’m married.

I’m a parent.

I’m a business owner.

And I’m autistic.

Like many people,

I was late in discovering
the fact that I’m autistic.

It was only when my own child
was going through the diagnosis process

and I was faced with this long list
of traits and behaviors

that indicate that somebody
might be on the autistic spectrum,

and they all seemed eerily familiar,

that the pennies started dropping.

I spent 30 years

believing that the reason
I struggled to make friends as a child

was because I had the wrong accent.

When I was five, we moved house.

We only moved 20 miles,

but I believe the reason
why I couldn’t make friends very easily

and the reason why
I kept making social gaffes

was because I spoke the wrong way.

It was the only thing I could think of

that would explain why making friends
with other kids was so hard.

In retrospect, it might have been
because I thought

the make-believe games that everybody else
wanted to play were dull and boring.

It could have been because small talk,

even the primary school
playground variety,

was something I had zero interest
in engaging with.

It could have been influenced
ever so slightly by my belief

that the only toy worth playing with
and talking about was LEGO Technic.

And maybe, just maybe, my social skills
left a little bit to be desired.

But primary school me didn’t have
the capacity to comprehend all that yet,

so I just stayed in my bemused
and lonely little bubble,

until I was 10

and somehow I was given
the lead role in the school play.

When I was on that stage,
playing Oliver in “Oliver,”

I overacted terribly
and the other kids laughed.

They laughed with me and not at me.

They were connecting with me
for the first time.

It was a huge lightbulb moment.

My peers started to like me
when I played a role for them,

and there began my journey
into learning how to mask

and how to adapt who I appeared to be
to the outside world

so that they would accept me.

This is not an uncommon story
for an autistic person.

Now, although it may seem as though
this story is “Oh, woe is me,

I only got by in life
by compromising myself

and pretending to be
somebody that I’m not,”

that’s not the case.

I was blessed with a loving family

who were always open
and accepting of my quirks.

When I realized I was queer at 15,
they accepted it without question.

I never felt I needed to hide it -
and back in the 90s, that was a big thing.

Once I started to master
the basics of social etiquette

and I got to high school,

where I found other kind of geeky,
socially awkward kids,

I started to form friendships,

some of which have lasted to this day.

I always did well academically.

I came out of uni with a first class
honours degree in design,

and life looked pretty rosy,

until I had to start fitting
into the workplace.

It turns out that this autistic brain,

the same brain that
really didn’t understand

why anyone would ever want
to play make-believe

is equally incapable
of sitting back quietly

when faced with a business
practice and a workplace

that doesn’t make logical sense
or seems inefficient.

Now, to a degree, this can be helpful.

I’ve been able to point out things
to past employers and businesses

that have enabled them
to change the way they work

and innovate in ways
that have been helpful.

But in the grand scheme of things,

somebody that finds “the way we’ve always
done things” totally unacceptable

if it compromises efficiency,

someone who’s constantly
trying to innovate

in a big system
that doesn’t move very easily,

eventually overstays their welcome.

I never once held down a job
for longer than 18 months

before it was clearly time to move on.

Workplaces, like schools,
function through order.

They’re made up of boxes

that allow these big,
cumbersome structures to hold together

and do what they set out to do.

But those boxes don’t fit everybody.

So I left one job and then another,

and then I had kids.

I became a full-time parent.

And then because, as we all know,
it’s virtually impossible

to find a job that fits
around juggling small children -

but I have the skills -

I set up my own design business.

I had no idea at the time
what a revelation this was going to be.

Yes, it enabled me
to start earning an income

whilst also being a primary parent,

but it also freed me up
to do things my own way.

I was no longer tied down
to the way things “should” be done.

Let me give you an example.

Here we have the traditional
design process.

This is the way that I was taught
to work with a design client.

The client writes a brief,
sends it to the designer.

The designer creates
multiple possible draft solutions

and sends them to the client.

The client picks one -

the rest are immediately thrown
in the bin, never to be seen again -

and asks for revisions.

The designer makes those revisions,

and then the two play email tag
for as long as it takes,

until the client
is happy with the final design

or until both parties
lose the will to live,

whichever happens soonest.

This process can take weeks
or even months,

and I could never stand it.

So I stopped doing it.

When I had my own business,
I sat down with my clients, in person.

We wouldn’t write a brief;
we’d have a conversation.

There’d be no email
to ask for a darker shade of blue

because they could ask right
there on the spot

and they could see how it
looked in an instant.

There’d be no waiting for weeks
for the end result

because we’d create it together,
right there, on the spot, in a few hours.

What started as a way for me
to bypass the need to create designs

that would never be used

resulted in a methodology that also
got results many, many times faster.

It was a win-win.

But bearing in mind my autistic traits,

it also had all the benefits
for me personally.

In this traditional way of working,

I’d have to have multiple jobs
running concurrently.

This autistic brain multitasks
about as well as these hands juggle -

it is not pretty -

and eventually I start dropping balls.

Multitasking is not a skill I have,

but in this way of working,
it was the only way to do it.

But over here,

I only have to do one thing at a time.

In fact, I get to use
my autistically enhanced ability

to obsess totally and completely
on a single subject at one time:

my client.

I get to laser-focus on that one job
with no distraction,

which not only gets it finished faster,

but it also means
that once I know that job is done

and my client’s needs are met,

it’s done and I can leave
that mental space.

Once I do, my brain no longer
has to carry it around,

and I can’t tell you how freeing that is.

Because I run my own business,

I’ve been able to adapt a working
practice that didn’t work for me

into one that did.

And whilst doing so,

I inadvertently created
a new way of working

that is also brilliant for my clients,

which has been brilliant for business.

And I am not alone.

When I look around me
in the entrepreneurial community,

I see neurodiverse
business owners everywhere -

not just autistic people,
but people with ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia.

I see a world full of people
who, just like me,

have wonderfully different brains
that don’t fit into the boxes

that traditional career paths
try to put us into.

Those people, just like me,
chose to make it their own way.

And pretty much all of us have lived
through years of ultimately trauma

because we have been trying
to build careers for ourselves

in a world made up of boxes
that do not fit us.

Many of us arrived at self-employment
and entrepreneurship out of desperation,

and that sucks.

Entrepreneurship is brilliant.

It allows people to build businesses
on their own terms.

For neurodiverse people,

it can be a vehicle for them
to create businesses,

to generate income and to build lives

that allow their unique
brilliance to shine

without having to spend years
in forms of employment that squash them

or, even worse, teach them
that they are incapable of succeeding.

In a 2019 study by the Institute
of Leadership and Management,

half of all leaders and managers reported
that they would not employ somebody

who had one or more
neurodivergent conditions.

This is the world of employment

that neurodiverse people
have to walk into.

I never held down a job
for longer than 18 months.

But I have now been running
my business for nine years,

and I have reached levels of success
that I never dreamed could be possible,

which is great,

but it’s actually not why
I’m standing on this stage today.

I’m standing here today

because it took me 36 years
to figure out why I was different

and why some things were so hard.

I stand on this stage as a parent
of neurodiverse children.

I don’t want my kids to have
to go through years of not fitting in

before they have the opportunity
to forge their own way.

I don’t want any kids
to have to go through that.

Did you know that careers advisers
are not taught to suggest self-employment

or entrepreneurship as an option?

I do, because I asked them,
as I prepared for this talk.

I wanted to know if their careers advisory
world ever say to people,

“Set up your own business!

You’ve got a brilliant different brain
and brilliant different ideas.

You should do it your own way!”

But it turns out that’s not in the manual.

We might want to update that manual.

We are getting better all the time
at diagnosing neurodiversity.

But all the support that’s on offer
after that diagnosis

focuses on teaching
the neurodiverse person

how to change their behaviours,

how to change themselves

so that they can more easily fit
into society’s boxes.

We need to stop doing that.

And when it comes to supporting
neurodiverse people

to find jobs and careers,

we need to start
promoting entrepreneurship

as a viable career choice.

We should be doing that for everybody,

but especially for neurodiverse people
who have wonderfully different brains

that will only excel when they’re not
using most of their capacity

just to get through a workday
that somebody else designed.

We need to tell our
differently-brained young people

that they can forge their own path.

They can be the innovators,
they can be the leaders,

and they can lead the way for everybody.

We need to tell them they can do it,

and we need to believe
in them when they do.

And to everybody
here watching this, all of you,

but especially if you’re neurodiverse -

then let me be the one to tell you

that you do not have to fit
into a neurotypical box.

You do not have to fit into the boxes

that the world has been trying
to put you into,

because those boxes were not made for you.

You can make your own box.

Thank you.

(Applause) (Cheers)

抄写员:Leonardo Silva
审稿人:Rhonda Jacobs

嗨。

我是 G。

我很奇怪。

我是非二进制的。

我已结婚。

我是家长。

我是企业主。

我是自闭症患者。

像许多人一样,

我发现
自己患有自闭症这一事实很晚。

只有当我自己的孩子
正在经历诊断过程

并且我面临着一长串

表明某人
可能属于自闭症谱系的特征

和行为时,他们似乎都非常熟悉

,便士开始下降。

我花了 30 年的时间

相信
我小时候很难交到朋友

是因为我的口音不对。

五岁的时候,我们搬了家。

我们只搬了 20 英里,

但我相信
我之所以不能很容易地交到朋友,

而且
我一直在社交上失态,

是因为我说话的方式不对。

这是我能想到的

唯一能解释为什么
和其他孩子交朋友这么难的事情。

回想起来,这可能是
因为我

认为其他人
都想玩的虚构游戏乏味无聊。

这可能是因为闲聊,

甚至是小学
操场上的各种闲聊,

我都没有兴趣
参与其中。

认为唯一值得玩
和谈论的玩具是乐高技术,这可能会稍微影响它。

也许,只是也许,我的社交技巧
还有点不足。

但是小学的我还
没有能力去理解这一切,

所以我就一直呆在
迷茫孤独的小泡泡里,

直到10岁

,不知怎的,我被赋予
了学校戏剧的主角。

当我在那个舞台上
扮演“奥利弗”中的奥利弗时,我表演得

太过火
了,其他孩子都笑了。

他们和我一起笑,而不是对我笑。

他们
第一次与我联系。

这是一个巨大的灯泡时刻。

当我为他们扮演角色时,我的同龄人开始喜欢我,

并开始了我的旅程,
学习如何掩饰

以及如何使我
的外表适应外界,

以便他们接受我。 对于自闭症患者来说,

这并不是一个罕见的故事

现在,虽然这个故事看起来好像
是“哦,不幸的是我,

我只能
通过妥协自己

并假装自己
不是某个人来过生活”

,但事实并非如此。

我很幸运有一个充满爱的家庭

,他们总是开放
并接受我的怪癖。

当我意识到我在 15 岁时是个酷儿时,
他们毫无疑问地接受了它。

我从不觉得我需要隐藏它
——回到 90 年代,这是一件大事。

一旦我开始
掌握社交礼仪的基础知识

并进入高中,

在那里我发现了其他类型的极客,
社交尴尬的孩子,

我开始建立友谊,

其中一些一直持续到今天。

我在学业上总是做得很好。

我从大学毕业时获得了一等
荣誉设计学位

,生活看起来很美好,

直到我不得不开始
适应工作场所。

事实证明,这个自闭症

大脑,这个
真正不明白

为什么有人会想玩虚构的大脑,

在面对商业
实践和不合逻辑的工作场所

时同样无法安静地坐下来
或似乎效率低下。

现在,在某种程度上,这可能会有所帮助。

我已经能够
向过去的雇主和企业

指出一些事情,这些事情使他们
能够改变他们的工作

方式
并以有益的方式进行创新。

但在大局中,如果

有人认为“我们一直
做事的方式”

会损害效率,

那是完全不可接受的,有人

在一个
不容易移动的大系统中不断尝试创新,

最终会超过他们的欢迎 .

在很明显是时候继续前进之前,我从来没有坚持过超过 18 个月的工作。

工作场所,如学校,
通过秩序运作。

它们由盒子组成

,这些盒子可以让这些大而
笨重的结构结合在一起

并完成他们打算做的事情。

但这些盒子并不适合所有人。

所以我离开了一份工作,然后又离开了一份工作,

然后我有了孩子。

我成为了全职父母。

然后因为,众所周知
,几乎

不可能找到
适合杂耍小孩的工作 -

但我有技能 -

我建立了自己的设计公司。

当时我不知道
这将是一个什么样的启示。

是的,它使我
能够

在成为主要父母的同时开始赚取收入,

但它也让我可以自由
地按照自己的方式做事。

我不再
受制于“应该”做事的方式。

让我给你举个例子。

在这里,我们有传统的
设计过程。

这是我被
教导与设计客户合作的方式。

客户写了一份简报,
发给设计师。

设计师创建
多个可能的草案解决方案

并将它们发送给客户。

客户选择了一个

  • 其余的立即被
    扔进垃圾箱,再也不会被看到 -

并要求修改。

设计师进行这些修改,

然后两人
尽可能长时间地播放电子邮件标签,

直到客户
对最终设计感到满意

或直到双方都
失去生存意愿,

以最快的时间为准。

这个过程可能需要数周
甚至数月

,我永远无法忍受。

所以我停止了它。

当我有自己的生意时
,我会亲自和我的客户坐下来。

我们不会写简报;
我们会谈谈的。

没有
电子邮件要求更深的蓝色阴影,

因为他们可以当场询问

,他们可以立即看到它
的外观。 最终结果

无需等待数周

因为我们会
在几个小时内就地、现场一起创建它。

最初是为了让
我绕过

创建永远不会使用的设计的需要,从而

产生了一种方法,该方法也可以
更快地获得结果。

这是双赢的。

但考虑到我的自闭症特征,

它对我个人也有所有好处

在这种传统的工作方式中,

我必须
同时运行多个作业。

这个自闭症的大脑会
像这些手一样同时处理多项任务——

这并不漂亮

——最终我开始丢球。

多任务处理不是我的技能,

但在这种工作方式中,
这是唯一的方法。

但在这里,

我一次只需要做一件事。

事实上,我可以利用
我自闭症增强的能力

,一次完全地、完全地沉迷
于一个主题:

我的客户。

我可以毫不分心地专注于那一项工作

这不仅可以更快地完成它,

而且还
意味着一旦我知道这项工作已经完成

并且我的客户的需求得到了满足,

它就完成了,我可以离开
那个心理空间 .

一旦我这样做了,我的大脑就
不再需要随身携带它

,我无法告诉你这是多么自由。

因为我经营自己的企业,

所以我能够将一种
对我不起作用的工作实践

变成对我有用的工作实践。

在这样做的同时,

我无意中创造
了一种新的工作方式,

这对我的客户来说也很棒,

这对商业来说也很棒。

我并不孤单。

当我
在创业社区环顾四周时,

我看到到处都是神经多样性的
企业主——

不仅是自闭症患者,
还有患有多动症、阅读障碍、运动障碍的人。

我看到了一个充满人的世界
,他们和我一样,

有着非常不同的大脑
,不适合

传统职业道路
试图让我们进入的盒子。

那些人,就像我一样,
选择了自己的方式。

几乎我们所有人都
经历了多年的最终创伤,

因为我们一直在努力

在一个由不适合我们的盒子组成的世界中为自己建立事业

我们中的许多人是在绝望中自谋职业
和创业的,

这很糟糕。

创业是辉煌的。

它允许人们
按照自己的方式建立业务。

对于具有神经多样性的人来说,

它可以成为
他们创造企业

、创造收入和建立生活的工具

,让他们的独特
才华焕发出光芒,

而不必花费数年时间
从事会压垮他们的工作,

或者更糟糕的是,教
他们 无法成功。

在领导与管理研究所 2019 年的一项研究中

一半的领导者和管理者
表示他们不会

雇用患有一种或多种
神经发散性疾病的人。

这是具有

神经多样性的人
必须走进的就业世界。

我的
工作时间从未超过 18 个月。

但是我现在已经
经营了九年,

并且达到
了我从未梦想过的成功水平,

这很棒,

但这实际上并不是
我今天站在这个舞台上的原因。

我今天站在这里,

因为我花了 36 年的时间
才弄清楚为什么我与众不同

以及为什么有些事情如此艰难。

我站在这个舞台上作为
神经多样性儿童的父母。

我不希望我的孩子们在有

机会开创自己的道路之前,必须经历多年不适应。

我不希望任何
孩子必须经历这些。

您是否知道职业
顾问没有被教导建议将自营职业

或创业作为一种选择?

我这样做了,
因为我在准备这次演讲时问过他们。

我想知道他们的职业咨询
界是否曾经对人们说:

“建立自己的事业!

你有一个绝妙的不同大脑
和绝妙的不同想法。

你应该按照自己的方式去做!”

但事实证明,这不在手册中。

我们可能想要更新该手册。

我们
在诊断神经多样性方面一直在进步。

但是在诊断之后提供的所有支持都集中

在教神经多样性的人

如何改变他们的行为,

如何改变自己,

以便他们更容易
融入社会的盒子。

我们需要停止这样做。

在支持具有
神经多样性的

人找到工作和职业时,

我们需要开始
将创业

作为一种可行的职业选择来推广。

我们应该为每个人这样做

,尤其是对于
那些拥有完全不同大脑的神经多样性的人来说

,只有在他们不
利用自己的大部分

能力来度过别人设计的工作日
时,他们才会表现出色。

我们需要告诉
大脑不同的年轻人

,他们可以开辟自己的道路。

他们可以是创新者,
他们可以是领导者

,他们可以为每个人带路。

我们需要告诉他们他们可以做到,

当他们做到时我们需要相信他们。

对于
在座的每个人,你们所有人

,尤其是如果你是神经多样性的——

那么让我来告诉你

,你不必
适应神经典型的盒子。

你不必装进

世界一直
试图把你放进去的

盒子里,因为那些盒子不是为你设计的。

你可以自己做盒子。

谢谢你。

(掌声)(欢呼)