Source: Pangdemonium

In May last year, Pangdemonium presented a play, giving everyone a chance to fully experience a powerful and emotional performance revolving around autism. Directed by Tracie Pang and written by Deanna Jent, Falling examined the meaning of unconditional love, and dares to ask: “How do you love someone who is difficult to love?” The play revolved around Tami, Bill, Lisa, and Josh. Lisa and Josh are children to both Tami and Bill, who are ordinary parents doing their best to bring up their two teenage kids, one of whom has severe autism. The play starred Neo Swee Lin, Adrian Pang, Tan Kheng Hua, Andrew Marko, and Fiona Lim.
This year, in conjunction with Autism Awareness Month, Our Better World spoke to local actor and director Adrian Pang about how autism became more than just a word for him. The story has garnered over 500,000 views, shared over 8,500 times, and has also caught the attention of Madam Ho Ching, Straits Times, Temasek Foundation Cares and other online communities.
Our Better World is a digital storytelling initiative of the Singapore International Foundation. They focus on telling stories of people doing good in Asia to inspire the online community to take action.
Below is what Mr Pang shared with Our Better World in full about what he learnt on autism and what it means to everyone as a society:

Unless we’re directly involved, we see autism from a distance. We see it without clarity, distinction, or form.
As a team, we knew that going into the production Falling, we would be entering an entirely new world. We did as much research as we could. We spoke with many parents, siblings, and coaches of individuals with autism.
One parent told me that what she needed more than anything in the world was respite.
A moment of relief from the challenges of raising a child with autism. It’s something many parents with autistic children need.
We spent time at St. Andrew’s Autism Center interacting as much as we were able to with adults who had autism. It’s one of the few places that does offer some respite to the parents. But there is a limit to what they can do. About one-in-a-hundred people in Singapore fall into the spectrum of autism. One percent. It may not sound like a large number, until you start to break it down.
According to the Autism Resource Center in Singapore there are 50,000 Singaporeans with autism. Most of them, almost 38,000, are adults. With figures like these, there isn’t always room at St. Andrew’s to provide respite to all those families. What will this mean for the thousands of others without families to care for them?
Like the spectrum of autism, the solutions to the growing challenge of autism will be equally wide and varied. No single institution can solve it, there will be no singular approach that will work, and just like the parents, we as a society, need to prove ourselves strong enough, brave enough, and loving enough to open our eyes, minds, and hearts to the special ones amongst us.
It is easy to look at the behaviour of the autistic and immediately think the worst of them, to judge. One parent I spoke to ended up making cards to hand out to passers-by as they “tsk tsk”-ed their way past her son as he had a meltdown — usually caused by the overstimulation of crowds or loud noises. The card simply informed them that he was autistic and asked for their understanding.
The biggest worry these parents have is about how their autistic child will cope after they’re gone. Who will take care of them? Who will “love someone who is difficult to love”?
I feel our understanding, as a people, as a society, has to grow in order for there to be a place for the autistic in our world.

[youtube id=”CnkktSgfUfg”] Video credit: Our Better World
Learn more about autism and the prevalence of autism in Singapore.
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