
What we’re about
Mission Statement
The Autism Ambassadors Corps is a coalition of Autistics and Neurotypicals(1) who seek to bring the entire autism community(2) together in constructive dialog in order that all sides can obtain mutual understanding and admiration for each other.
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(1) Autistics have atypical neurology. Therefore, non-Autistics who have typical neurology are referred to as “neurotypicals.”
(2) The Autism community refers not only to Autistics themselves, but to all those who are affected by Autism. This would include parents, siblings, educators, psychologists/counselors, etc.Mission Statement:
Goals
1) Provide a Complete, Current and Usable understanding of Autism
2) Form groups that promote constructive interaction between Autistics and Neurotypicals
3) Assist Autistics in their personal development in order for them to reach their full potential in life.
Definition of Autism
Autism is an atypical neurological connectivity paradox resulting in heightened activity in some areas of the brain and decreased activity in others, compared to neurotypicals.
Who are Autistics?
Autistics are human beings who have Autism. They have the same needs, wants, personality strengths and weakness, etc. as any other human being, but face unique challenges in having their needs and wants met. There may also be residual benefits to the built in countermeasure they need to overcome these challenges, especially in the area of memory.
The Golden Rules of Dealing with Autistics
These Golden Rules provide autistics and their loved ones with the hope of personal dignity that comes through the understanding of oneself, social inclusion, the possibility of self-improvement, the hope of achieving goals, etc.
1) Do unto Autistics as you would have others do unto you.
2) Everyone, no matter their neurological configuration, should be…
__a) …given the benefit of the doubt that they can achieve their goals and overcome their personal challenges.
__b) …granted the same rights as any other human being. These include, but are not limited to, the right…
______i) …to be their own unique individual selves.
______ii) …of self-expression and to have their own personal viewpoints to be treated as valid.
______iii) …to make their needs known with the hope that those needs might be met.
______iv) …to receive the support necessary to improve their quality of life.
______v) …to set and obtain their own personal goals.
______vi) …to be protected from bullying and mistreatment.
Practices the AAC Supports
1) Providing a complete, scientific, clinical and experiential understanding of Autism.
2) Helping Autistics to develop effective self-management skills that will allow them to function with as little special assistance and/or accommodations as possible.
3) Teaching Autistics who can advocate for themselves how to do so.
4) Speaking about Autism on behalf of those Autistics who cannot speak for themselves.
5) Providing informed referrals for those who need them.
6) Develop solutions for parents who need childcare for their Autistic children in order to attend Autism meetings.
7) Working to bring more uniformity in Autism diagnoses.
8) Autistics providing direct input to researchers.
9) Bringing recognition to those who provide actual support and services.
10) Having the term “Autism Spectrum Disorder” replaced with “Autism Paradox.”
Upcoming events (4+)
See all- Tuesday Night Self-Improvement/Mutual Support GroupAbility 360 Classroom "A", Phoenix, AZ
We’ve had problems with those who want to follow the path of hatred and animosity towards those who they view as being in the “enemy camp” trying to hijack our meetings. I would describe them as wanting nothing more than a “war council” so they can publicly attack those whom they view as their enemies and transform society into exactly what they think is would be. The core supporters of the AAC rejects this path.
Therefore, all attendees are required to abide by all of the pledges listed in the AAC’s Pre-Activity Readings: https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/pre-activity-readings.pdf
Those who refuse to fulfill these pledges will be asked to leave the meeting.
Most Autism community support groups are basically topical discussions. This specific meeting is what AA would refer to as a "sharing" meeting. We learn about ourselves primarily through discussing how are week has gone, what we are going through right now and what we can do to improve our quality of life. We can also talk about what we’ve learned through attending discussion meetings, as well as other educational sources, and figure out how that information applies to us specifically.
This meeting is for everyone in the Autism community. One of the biggest problems that I've observed since being diagnosed in 2009 is that there's a lot of misunderstanding between Autistics & non-Autistics. The only way that we can gain mutual understand of each other is to sit together and discuss these issues.
Jason Bunn-Parsons, a Certified Recovery/Peer Support Specialist, has developed an Autistic Self-Improvement/Advocacy mentorship program. It’s designed to 1st build up our self-confidence & self-esteem that’s necessary to improve our quality of life by helping us become all that we are capable of. This will in turn provide us with a solid foundation for effective self-advocacy in order to instill confidence in those around us to give us more opportunities to do what we do best. This will in turn boost our self-confidence & self-esteem even more, resulting in a self-perpetuating positive feedback loop.
Autistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Itinerary
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-itinerary.pdfAutistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Group Guide
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-guide.pdfMost current versions of the "Self-Improvement/Advocacy projects” documents:
https://aacphoenix.com/self-improvement-and-advocacy-mentorship/Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89307106108
Meeting ID: 893 0710 6108
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- Cottonwood OutreachCottonwood-Oak Creek School District Building, Cottonwood, AZ
I’m planning an exploratory outreach to Cottonwood, AZ, and the surrounding area, to see if I can be of greater service to the Autism community who resides in the area that stretches from Prescott to Flagstaff. I’ve selected Cottonwood because it’s centrally located between those two points. I’m hoping that an area that is underserved by Autism experts with extensive academic credentials would be more open to the ideas of someone like me.
My background, and the those who’ve mentored me
I’m an Autistic with 56 years of life experience, the first 40 of which were pre-diagnosis due to me being raised in the 70s and 80s. After receiving my diagnosis in 2009, I sat under the mentorship of the most brilliant Autism expert you could ever ask to come across your path, Sue Golubock. A now retired Occupational Therapist, she didn’t get her diagnosis until her 50s due to her being raised in the 50s and 60s.
She, along with another Autistic who didn’t get her diagnosis until her late 20s, due to her being raised in the 80s and 90s, organized the Autism Society of Greater Phoenix’s Adult Autistic/Aspie support group. I’m not mentioning her name because she has since gotten in extremely partisan politics to the extent that I feel her commitment to them supersedes her commitment to her commitment to the Autism community.
I’ve also been mentored by a number of experts in a variety of non-Autism specific areas of understanding that provide me with the most diverse understanding of the human being referred to as Autistic or Aspies. These range from 12 step principle I learned while overcoming codependency, as well as the stress management and other social skills struggle that I now know are defining characteristics of Autism, to becoming a mature man of God. From the most effective childcare technics taught to me by a church’s Early Childhood Director who kept telling us about special consideration that we needed to show certain children, which I later figured out was her recognizing the need for Autistic/Aspie accommodations prior to Asperger’s becoming an official diagnosis, to a neurologist who critiqued my explanation of the neurological roots of Autism to make it consistent with the consensus scientific understanding back in 2013.
My YouTube Videos
My channel that’s up and running is “Teachersaurus’ Autism Advocacy,” 4 or 5 others dedicated mostly to non-Autism related topics are in the works. To understand what I’m wanting to bring to northern Arizona, the three playlist you should focus on would be “Autism Ambassadors Corps,” “My Critique of the Educational System” and Core Concepts for Upstanding Autistics.”
What my outreach is, and is not, going to be about
Both times I’ve done a public outreach in front of an educational establishment; bystanders have immediately assumed that I’m an angry protest who was there to cause trouble and called the police on me. Both situations proved to be a waist of law-enforcements’ time as my true intent was to engage in constructive dialogue about my ideas to anyone who wanted to talk to me. That, and the fact that my knowledge of both privet property laws and the first amendment meant that I was conducting myself in a manner they couldn’t have done anything about if I was a troublemaker.
I’m planning on being in front of the entrance to the district office between the hours of 7am – 12pm on Thursday, September 18, 2025, which is the latest I’d be able to stay before reporting to my one day 3pm – 3am job assignment in Sedona. My Friday outreach will be from 7am – 5pm, at which time I hope to have on invitation to join someone local to continue to our conversation in greater detail. So, if you live in the target area, or know someone who does, please let everyone know about my plan.
You can contact me personally by PMing me through meetup.com or emailing me at aacphoenix@outlook.com. - Tuesday Night Self-Improvement/Mutual Support GroupAbility 360 Classroom "A", Phoenix, AZ
We’ve had problems with those who want to follow the path of hatred and animosity towards those who they view as being in the “enemy camp” trying to hijack our meetings. I would describe them as wanting nothing more than a “war council” so they can publicly attack those whom they view as their enemies and transform society into exactly what they think is would be. The core supporters of the AAC rejects this path.
Therefore, all attendees are required to abide by all of the pledges listed in the AAC’s Pre-Activity Readings: https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/pre-activity-readings.pdf
Those who refuse to fulfill these pledges will be asked to leave the meeting.
Most Autism community support groups are basically topical discussions. This specific meeting is what AA would refer to as a "sharing" meeting. We learn about ourselves primarily through discussing how are week has gone, what we are going through right now and what we can do to improve our quality of life. We can also talk about what we’ve learned through attending discussion meetings, as well as other educational sources, and figure out how that information applies to us specifically.
This meeting is for everyone in the Autism community. One of the biggest problems that I've observed since being diagnosed in 2009 is that there's a lot of misunderstanding between Autistics & non-Autistics. The only way that we can gain mutual understand of each other is to sit together and discuss these issues.
Jason Bunn-Parsons, a Certified Recovery/Peer Support Specialist, has developed an Autistic Self-Improvement/Advocacy mentorship program. It’s designed to 1st build up our self-confidence & self-esteem that’s necessary to improve our quality of life by helping us become all that we are capable of. This will in turn provide us with a solid foundation for effective self-advocacy in order to instill confidence in those around us to give us more opportunities to do what we do best. This will in turn boost our self-confidence & self-esteem even more, resulting in a self-perpetuating positive feedback loop.
Autistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Itinerary
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-itinerary.pdfAutistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Group Guide
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-guide.pdfMost current versions of the "Self-Improvement/Advocacy projects” documents:
https://aacphoenix.com/self-improvement-and-advocacy-mentorship/Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89307106108
Meeting ID: 893 0710 6108
---
One tap mobile
+13462487799,,89307106108# US (Houston)
+16694449171,,89307106108# US
---
Dial by your location
• +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
• +1 669 444 9171 US
• +1 719 359 4580 US
• +1 720 707 2699 US (Denver)
• +1 253 205 0468 US
• +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
• +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
• +1 305 224 1968 US
• +1 309 205 3325 US
• +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
• +1 360 209 5623 US
• +1 386 347 5053 US
• +1 507 473 4847 US
• +1 564 217 2000 US
• +1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
• +1 646 931 3860 US
• +1 689 278 1000 US
Meeting ID: 893 0710 6108
Find your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kbCPuC8lDuFind your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kbCPuC8lDu
- Tuesday Night Self-Improvement/Mutual Support GroupAbility 360 Classroom "A", Phoenix, AZ
We’ve had problems with those who want to follow the path of hatred and animosity towards those who they view as being in the “enemy camp” trying to hijack our meetings. I would describe them as wanting nothing more than a “war council” so they can publicly attack those whom they view as their enemies and transform society into exactly what they think is would be. The core supporters of the AAC rejects this path.
Therefore, all attendees are required to abide by all of the pledges listed in the AAC’s Pre-Activity Readings: https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/pre-activity-readings.pdf
Those who refuse to fulfill these pledges will be asked to leave the meeting.
Most Autism community support groups are basically topical discussions. This specific meeting is what AA would refer to as a "sharing" meeting. We learn about ourselves primarily through discussing how are week has gone, what we are going through right now and what we can do to improve our quality of life. We can also talk about what we’ve learned through attending discussion meetings, as well as other educational sources, and figure out how that information applies to us specifically.
This meeting is for everyone in the Autism community. One of the biggest problems that I've observed since being diagnosed in 2009 is that there's a lot of misunderstanding between Autistics & non-Autistics. The only way that we can gain mutual understand of each other is to sit together and discuss these issues.
Jason Bunn-Parsons, a Certified Recovery/Peer Support Specialist, has developed an Autistic Self-Improvement/Advocacy mentorship program. It’s designed to 1st build up our self-confidence & self-esteem that’s necessary to improve our quality of life by helping us become all that we are capable of. This will in turn provide us with a solid foundation for effective self-advocacy in order to instill confidence in those around us to give us more opportunities to do what we do best. This will in turn boost our self-confidence & self-esteem even more, resulting in a self-perpetuating positive feedback loop.
Autistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Itinerary
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-itinerary.pdfAutistic/Aspie Self-Improvement and Advocacy Support Group: Group Guide
https://autismambassadorscorps.files.wordpress.com/2020/05/aas-ias-group-guide.pdfMost current versions of the "Self-Improvement/Advocacy projects” documents:
https://aacphoenix.com/self-improvement-and-advocacy-mentorship/Join Zoom Meeting
https://us06web.zoom.us/j/89307106108
Meeting ID: 893 0710 6108
---
One tap mobile
+13462487799,,89307106108# US (Houston)
+16694449171,,89307106108# US
---
Dial by your location
• +1 346 248 7799 US (Houston)
• +1 669 444 9171 US
• +1 719 359 4580 US
• +1 720 707 2699 US (Denver)
• +1 253 205 0468 US
• +1 253 215 8782 US (Tacoma)
• +1 301 715 8592 US (Washington DC)
• +1 305 224 1968 US
• +1 309 205 3325 US
• +1 312 626 6799 US (Chicago)
• +1 360 209 5623 US
• +1 386 347 5053 US
• +1 507 473 4847 US
• +1 564 217 2000 US
• +1 646 558 8656 US (New York)
• +1 646 931 3860 US
• +1 689 278 1000 US
Meeting ID: 893 0710 6108
Find your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kbCPuC8lDuFind your local number: https://us06web.zoom.us/u/kbCPuC8lDu