Exposition

Design for Feeling Understood (last edited: 2025)

Amber Gastel

About this exposition

This thesis explores how late-diagnosed autistic individuals and their close circle can redesign their relationship after their diagnosis through communication that aligns with autistic ways of being. Grounded in the neurodiversity paradigm, the social model of disability, and the double empathy problem, the research combines interviews, co-creation sessions, and visual storytelling to uncover emotional and relational dynamics during post-diagnosis identity shifts. Through a neurodivergent lens—rooted in sensory awareness, pattern recognition, and visual thinking—this work challenges deficit-based narratives and proposes a compassionate, co-created communication framework. The goal is not assimilation but mutual understanding: enabling autistic individuals to embrace their authentic selves while guiding loved ones to meet them with compassion and openness. Ultimately, the project reimagines design as a tool for creating connection, not correction—honouring difference, restoring balance, and building inclusive systems where all ways of being are valid, visible, and valued.
typeresearch exposition
keywordsautism, metaphors, late-diagnosed, interpersonal communication, double empathy problem, toolkit
date09/05/2025
last modified13/05/2025
statusin review
share statuspublic
copyrightAmber van Gastel
licenseCC BY-NC-ND
languageEnglish
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/3645383/3645382


Comments are only available for registered users.