
Fall Down Seven Times, Get Up Eight
A young man's voice from the silence of autism
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Narrated by:
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David Mitchell
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Thomas Judd
About this listen
'Wise and witty... The evolution of Higashida's insights is at times almost unbearably moving' Financial Times
'The invitation to step inside Higashida's mind is irresistible' Evening Standard
Naoki Higashida met international success with The Reason I Jump, a revelatory account of life as a thirteen-year-old with non-verbal autism. Now he offers an equally illuminating insight into autism from his perspective as a young adult.
In concise, engaging pieces, he shares his thoughts and feelings on a broad menu of topics ranging from school experiences to family relationships, the exhilaration of travel to the difficulties of speech. Aware of how mystifying his behaviour can appear to others, Higashida describes the effect on him of such commonplace things as a sudden change of plan, or the mental steps he has to take simply to register that it's raining. Throughout, his aim is to foster a better understanding of autism and to encourage those with disabilities to be seen as people, not as problems.
With an introduction by David Mitchell, Fall Down Seven Times, Get Up Eight includes a dreamlike short story Higashida wrote for this edition. Both moving and of practical use, the book opens a window into the mind of an inspiring young man who meets the challenges of autism with tenacity and good humour. However often he falls down, he always gets back up.
'Higashida's observations across a whole range of topics are moving and thought-provoking -- all the more so for coming from the perspective of a social outsider' Guardian©2017 Naoki Higashida (P)2017 Hodder & Stoughton Limited
Most enlightening read
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Great insight I would recommend this author books
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It cannot fail to touch all who listen to it regardless of their background.
This book made me hate my own ignorance but then filled me with joy and had me near to tears several times.
Naoki Higashida is a warrior amongst us, and worthy of high praise.
Everyone should listen to this book
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Amazing
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Leonardo divinci of the mind
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This is a sensational document which could lead to a significant shift in how non-verbal autistic people (in Naoki Higashida’s words neuro-atypicals) are treated. Hagashida’s writing (carried out laboriously by means of an alphabet board) is introduced by the novelist David (Cloud Atlas) Mitchell who translated Fall Down 7 Times, Get up 8 with his Japanese wife Keiko Yoshida. The Mitchells’ intense involvement with Higashida’s writing springs from their experience of raising an autistic non-verbal son who displays the same epic meltdowns and ferocious head-banging as Higashida has done. With Thomas Judd, David Mitchell reads the work with skill and empathy so that although this is a translation, you can belive this is Hagashida’s voice.
What Higashida shows through his writing is that the Japanese term for autism which translates as ‘self-locked-up disease’ is wrong. Now nineteen, he talks to us directly, asking for our understanding and advising us how we can reach and best help people like him. Perhaps his strongest message is: don’t think that because we can’t communicate in words that we are incapable of comprehension – talk to us. Mitchell took this advice and spoke to his son ‘normally’ with great improvements in his autistic behaviours. Higashida leads us inside his head so that we can understand how complex the world is for him; how meltdowns and sleeve-biting are signs of his anger and frustrations with himself; how he is not closed in and unimaginative and incapable of empathy as is generally thought, and people need to see that despite the apparently useless strangled sounds he makes, he is open, grievously isolated and lonely, kind, loving and deeply appreciative of his family. The moment he manages after years to say ‘buy’ and ‘carnation’ to his carer by painstakingly joining links in his brain and so give his mother a Mother’s Day gift is very moving. When you see such a child not able to laugh with others, it isn’t because he has no sense of humour (he has), but because the contortions of the face when people laugh is frightening, just as when he wrinkles his face before the mirror he cannot recognise himself.
Higashida’s plea is that his book will change people’s attitudes and if just one neuro-atypical child is helped in the agony of his non-verbal existence because someone has read this book, his efforts will have been worth-while.
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full of insights
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In “Fall Down 7 Times Get Up 8” Higashida, in brief chapters rarely longer than a page or two, talks both about his day to day life, as well as life around him as he sees it. A simple thing we “neuro-typicals” take for granted – opening and closing an umbrella – is a challenge that provides the basis for a statement – “people with autism may need more time, but as they grow they can do more things” – that brings a tear to the eye. He then meditates on how it is hard for those with autism to combat their emotions even when the cause of the problem is known, and how much short positive instructions help.
In other pages Higashida talks about his daily life, the need to do things by routine and the issues he faces with time management. In fact, in that and in many other things, he could be talking for many of us! The issue of whether autistic children should go to special or normal schools is addressed in an illuminatingly balanced way. There is also humour – he states plainly he doesn’t “get” fashion, for example as to why some buttons should be left unbuttoned in a coat, for example. And goes on to add “The daily lives of the fashion conscious, with all its dos and donuts must be exhausting.”
There is also a foray into fiction, in what is the longest chapter of the short book.
“Fall Down 7 Times Get Up 8” would be a fairly well written memoir of the thoughts of a teenager even if its author wasn’t who he is. But the reality only serves to highlight the potential of those afflicted with autism, and how society as a whole has done so very little to realise this, instead letting the majority of sufferers slink away since the task of integrating them into mainstream society is too costly, or more likely, too difficult – but how difficult can it be compared to the difficulties that haven’t stopped someone from writing a book like this?
Eye opening
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positive mental attitude
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overrated.
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