I'm sensitive to many perfumes, dusts, solvents, blah blah blah.
One characteristic that's important to include in access planning is "does more matter?"
When I'm surrounded by ppl with thick layers of personal scent & washing powder & fumes from petrol-pumping, then just a small increment of more scent can send me over.
But if attendees at an event are truly attempting scent freedom (which includes supplying adequate soap/shampoo to all in attendance), then folks like you, using scent to manage life-interaction, may not affect me at all. It's not a straight line.
I highly appreciate your ethics. To grossly generalize, one of the wonders of knowing autistics is how many think so carefully of ethical implications.
no subject
One characteristic that's important to include in access planning is "does more matter?"
When I'm surrounded by ppl with thick layers of personal scent & washing powder & fumes from petrol-pumping, then just a small increment of more scent can send me over.
But if attendees at an event are truly attempting scent freedom (which includes supplying adequate soap/shampoo to all in attendance), then folks like you, using scent to manage life-interaction, may not affect me at all. It's not a straight line.
I highly appreciate your ethics. To grossly generalize, one of the wonders of knowing autistics is how many think so carefully of ethical implications.