Five Minutes is an online literary magazine that publishes 100-word micro-memoirs about five minutes of the writer’s life. I had a piece called “One Phone Call” in Five Minutes last winter, and yesterday I had my second piece in the magazine. This one is called “Say Goodbye,” and it’s about my dad telling me about my mom’s cancer diagnosis. Read it here.
Five Minutes: One Phone Call
Five Minutes is an online literary magazine that publishes 100-word micro-memoirs about five minutes of the writer’s life. Mine is the story of the evening of Tuesday, October 5, of my freshman year of high school. CW: suicidal ideation. Read the piece here.
Twin Cities Geek: Being Autistic, Seeing Myself Represented in Media Is Not Always a Good Thing
After over two years of copy editing for Twin Cities Geek, a Minnesota-based online magazine, and writing a couple book reviews and a few notices of fandom auctions, I finally decided to dig in and tackle a topic that had been kicking around my brain for a while: the way the autism community often receives “representation” in media by giving non-human characters autistic traits to demonstrate how different they are from humans. I talk about Sarah Rees Brennan’s The Demon’s Lexicon, Martha Wells’ Murderbot, and Star Trek. Read the article here.
Living Lutheran: The Power of an Autism Diagnosis
The April 2021 edition of Living Lutheran magazine included an article I wrote, titled “The Power of an Autism Diagnosis: Tips to Make the Church More Accessible.” I’m thrilled to be getting the word out about autism accessibility in the church, beyond the two articles I’ve written for the Sparkhouse blog. As I explain in the post, I love being autistic, and autistic people will be autistic regardless of whether we get diagnosed; the beauty of a diagnosis is that it helps us understand why we are the way we are, and thus gives us tools we can use to advocate for ourselves.
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