In the name of the mother and the father

  • Dates
    2020 - Ongoing
  • Author
  • Location Paraná, Brazil

Growing up I felt an emptiness caused by my incapacity to understand myself. I was diagnosed with autism when I was 18 years old. To this day it is still difficult for me to approach this subject because I don’t want to be looked at as someone who is part of a spectrum or listen to quotes like “but you don’t look autistic”, “you know how to express yourself”. I even feel ashamed just imagining people reading

this text. Furthermore, I am tired of going through behavior manuals: rehearsing exhaustively in my head: how should I behave, dress and make my body belong.

I am aware there are many others like me, several of those who never received the diagnosis. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, which is considered a reference in Brazil, has pointed out in a report published in 2020: women represent one in four people diagnosed with Autistic Spectrum Disorder (ASD). But new studies

show that spectrum carriers often go unnoticed because the assessment criteria are based on the male behavioral stereotype. We represent a screaming silence: ready to conform to rules in exchange for acceptance. We’ve learned how to camouflage ourselves.

It’s within the family, listening to teachings of the past, brought to me by my mother and my father, that I learnt how to behave. And I felt the chasm between two universes: the one considered real by society and my private world of mental images / words. From the tension and strangeness resulting from this clash, I get swallowed into stories that take me off to a rural imaginary from southern

Brazil, from the very fictional reality, descending into my own micro-worlds. Like a coiled network chain.

After ten years after the ASD diagnosis and I am still trying to put my mental confusion in order: in the borders of photography, literature, theatricality and documentation I put in self portraits and textual images the strangeness of my relationships with myself and my parents, it seems like I’m creating a map of two worlds longing to touch each other.

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The anguish before the government’s neglect in the midst of the health crisis, of Covid-19, in Brazil, with its more than 650 thousand dead, changed my perspective about photography. If they choose the bodies that should or shouldn’t live, if we are isolated, I understand that we need to narrate ourselves. Resist. Not allow urselves to be erased. In each micro story there are infinite others that have not had the chance to express themselves.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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Regarding the process of photographing these scenes that obsessively popped into my head, placing my mother and my father as one of the characters: it was a way of shouting out everything that I couldn't say in words. The woman and the man who run, in despair, out in that open field are made of multiple layers of images. It's my father, as a boy, returning from a novena with his family and witnessing their wooden house in flames. And it's also related to my thoughts, which are full of images and words, carrying another woman that inhabits me and to whom I didn’t get acquainted yet.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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Building a fictional reality was the way I found to break these stereotypes. So other autistic women wouldn’t feel like a farce: for creating their own worlds and designing their own mental abstractions.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I’ve always enjoyed asking questions. Willing to learn more about people's stories. I think biographical narratives are my main hyperfocus. My curiosity made me go off-limits and ask unusual or inappropriate questions. I have always wanted to know more and more. But it's not like I knew it was wrong. By getting feedback from my surroundings I just kept adding to my repertoire “what should not be said”.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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As a contrast, I have always had difficulty expressing what I was feeling. In childhood, my mother tried several times to get closer to me, to get access to my inner place, to the fixed point which I would look at for hours. I didn't allow her to trespass it. Truth be told, I didn't know what was going on. As if I couldn't approach a part of myself.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I thought I wouldn’t be able to write you as a character. You dropped out from every word. The more I wrote, the less it became you. It's a strange movement, this feeling of coming and going. Then I was able to understand: it was me. I have been unable to build myself as a character.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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It's me, I can't find myself. It’s me who doesn’t know things. And if I don't know how to write about yourself, it's because you are me. You know: I wanted things to fall into place. But we are not the ones who invent the order of things, aren't we?

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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It hurts me to say. But one day I’ll have to erase some of these lines. It’s because they will not overlap one another. They will not create the required thread. That's the process. Yet: it hurts me. I get attached to things. Yes, yes: it’s necessary to let it leave. Go. Fly away. Like a red balloon in the sky. It goes higher and higher, wandering: pops into the air. You can only hear its noise.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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It hurts me. Because in every paragraph it was what brought me here. Like every teardrop which didn’t show up in the form of a rhyme. From when I didn't know if “cabeça” (head) was written with s or ç. Like the time when I signed my name with sheets glued to each other and the teacher said it was unreadable, and that I needed to watch my behavior.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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Why can’t I let the plants decompose? Do I like the version which came this far? Do I get down to it: just a version of myself? No. It’s just that words, images, are a fraction of me. And also that other one.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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The one which will turn to nothing. Hidden away. Deep down, in a part inaccessible to me. The secret of me. My unknown. These are not my words. But in case they are: it’s my edited projection. It’s what they want you to think, inorder for you to not think about that other part too.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I do not expose myself as I think I do. Here I get the chance to be the narrative I would always wanted to be. And if I try. If I dedicate clock ticks to it, with a broken spine, with eyes burning in front of a screen: I can make something good out of it. I can impose that projection.

© Luiza Kons - I can be a modern fable. And apply myself as a character.
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I can be a modern fable. And apply myself as a character.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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Or if I ran. Time fragments detached from my feet as they moved. The sun hitting my face. The wind is rising up my blouse. It’s uncomfortable. It’s been uncomfortable since I was born. And they have whispered to me it won’t get better.

© Luiza Kons - It’s related to speed, and my arms and legs dance. It makes sense to me.
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It’s related to speed, and my arms and legs dance. It makes sense to me.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I try to cling on what escapes me but I wish to embrace. The best hug is the one I haven’t felt yet. I walk because I believe in it. How would that be? How would it be if we haven’t invented the idea of the future? Or the past? In case we could understand that time, this thing that we named as such, which is how we call it, in fact didn’t exist? It’s not a matter of audacity.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I just repeat what I’ve been told. I’m good at it, you know? Of making new word puzzles. Then I signed it myself. This thing. Everything. Anything is mine. I’m reading the abstract which is the abstract of another book.In fact, I’ve just read a piece of it.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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I should stand up. Move on. Isn’t that how it goes? What about the walls? Thumble it down. Fast. There's something dripping. Nobody hears it. But it's deafening. Fast. Before they take you away.

© Luiza Kons - They’re going to take off your clothes and turn yourself inside out.
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They’re going to take off your clothes and turn yourself inside out.

© Luiza Kons - Image from the In the name of the mother and the father photography project
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The skin will be underneath your veins. Red. All of them red. The tip of the hair will be melted to the scalp. It doesn’t matter how delirious your dreams are. It drips. And after it gets wet it becomes slippery. You fall. And is soak.

© Luiza Kons - Everytime the liquid embraces you: it takes a part of you with it.
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Everytime the liquid embraces you: it takes a part of you with it.