By BERN MORLEY
You don’t need be the parent of a child with autism to identify with the story I am about to share with you. It is less about a young boy’s relationship with an inanimate object and more about the beauty to be found in discovering someone who “just gets you”.
Children on the Autism Spectrum often struggle to make friends and if they do happen to find friendship, it is often very precarious and hard to retain because of their inability to read social cues. Sure, I as his mother can bear to hear my son discuss the pros and cons of a flight path over the Atlantic nine times in a row, but children his own age are, (rightly so) less understanding and perhaps, just brutally honest with their disinterest.
So it’s stories like this one that bring me, as a parent, hope and give me a particularly good feeling about the future. I’m not saying it’s going to be easy, but if we can find a way that works for these children, we will have half the battle won.
To Siri With Love is a story about Gus, a 13-year-old boy who became best friends with Apple’s Siri – the iPhone’s Virtual Assistant program – in a way that sounds almost like an innocent, less futurist version of the movie “Her”. I wish I could say that my own son has used Siri for such enlightening purposes, but the only thing he has asked her is “do you know how to fart?” (By the way, Siri told him “this is about you, not me,” Well-played Siri, well-played).