I Almost Always Write In Pink Ink challenges you to contemplate the quietude of life against a world that is too loud, too bright, too intense, and too quiet, creating a space where others can see the pulsating disarray of an autistic mind. Reframing autistic movement not as something that needs fixing or through the lens of deficits, but instead recognising it as a different way of engaging with the world.
The work treats neurodiversity as kaleidoscopic, impacting the way people view, understand, and react to their environment. As a neurodiverse individual, I experience an incessant mental noise, a constant buzz that rarely subsides where the environment is not just experienced but reinterpreted, constantly shifting, challenging, and transforming.