This is the twelfth post in my autism awareness month series.
Over the past few weeks, I've described a lot of different things: a brain that gathers information constantly, a sensory system that doesn't filter, tasks that won't start without a valid reason, authority that doesn't register, friendships that fade without a maintenance impulse. These aren't separate quirks, they're expressions of the same underlying configuration.
One way to understand that configuration is through what I'd call the catalyst effect.
Autism hardly create effects directly. It amplifies whatever is already present, in both directions. High IQ combined with the constant information-gathering drive produces unusual pattern recognition and cross-domain connections. A food sensitivity combined with a sensory system that doesn't suppress signals produces amplified disruption. A structured environment with clear purpose combined with deep focus and low tolerance for ambiguity produces unusual loyalty and output. The same wiring in different conditions produces different amplified results.
This is why autism resists simple characterization. The genius stereotype and the burnout are not opposites, they're actually the same amplifier applied to different inputs. The person who seems to thrive and the person who is struggling may be running nearly identical hardware. What differs is the load, the environment, and how well the conditions match what the system actually needs.
It also means the costs and the strengths are inseparable. There is no version of the wiring that keeps the pattern recognition and removes the sensory overload. No version that keeps the deep focus and removes the demand avoidance. The gain is turned up on everything, both the useful and the costly alike.
Is autism a defect? A defect is a variation with negative consequences. The consequences here are real. But they're located in the mismatch between the wiring and the environment, not in a malfunction. The same configuration that generates friction in one context generates exceptional output in another. The question worth asking isn't how to fix the wiring, but rather how to design conditions where it can actually function.
This leads me to the last post in this series: on diagnosis, on what knowing changes, and on why this series exists at all.
This is part of my April 2026 autism awareness month series. First published on LinkedIn on 2026-04-27.
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