Many social environments are built around rituals.
Shared meals.
Extended conversations.
Structured gatherings.
For many people, these create connection.
For others, they create strain.
A Different Experience
As an autistic individual, I experience many of these rituals differently.
What feels natural to some can feel overwhelming or exhausting to me.
- crowded environments
- extended social expectations
- sensory overload
These aren’t minor inconveniences.
They can be genuinely difficult.
The Mismatch
The issue isn’t that rituals exist.
It’s that they are often treated as universal.
When someone doesn’t fit them, the assumption becomes:
“They need to adapt.”
But often, it’s the system that needs adjustment.
What Rituals Actually Do
Rituals serve a purpose:
- create connection
- provide structure
- reinforce belonging
That works well—when the system fits the person.
When it doesn’t, the same structure can create exclusion.
Cultural Perspective
Living in different cultures made this clearer.
In Japan, structure and expectation are precise.
In Argentina, social rituals are extended and expressive.
Both are valid.
Both can also be overwhelming—depending on how you process the world.
A Better Approach
The goal shouldn’t be to remove rituals.
It should be to make them more flexible.
That might mean:
- allowing variation in participation
- reducing unnecessary pressure
- creating multiple ways to engage
This directly connects to how I think about human systems.
Systems work best when they:
- support different ways of participating
- reduce unnecessary friction
- adapt to people—not force conformity
Because inclusion isn’t about adding people into a system.
It’s about adjusting the system itself.
System Application
A healthier system does not require every person to participate in the same way.
It asks better questions:
- What function is this ritual supposed to serve?
- Does this interaction actually create connection, or only signal conformity?
- Who is being excluded by the default expectation?
- Can the same social purpose be met through more than one path?
This matters in schools, workplaces, families, healthcare, public services, and digital environments.
When systems allow only one acceptable form of participation, they create unnecessary pressure. People may appear distant, resistant, rude, or disengaged when they are actually trying to manage sensory load, timing, uncertainty, or social translation.
The problem is not always the person.
Often, the problem is that the system has mistaken one communication style for the only valid one.
Reframe
Neurodiversity does not ask society to remove all structure.
It asks society to stop confusing structure with sameness.
Clear expectations can help. Predictable environments can help. Flexible participation can help. What harms people is not structure itself, but rigid structure that leaves no room for different nervous systems.
A more mature human system recognizes that connection can happen through speech, silence, shared work, written communication, parallel presence, direct honesty, or quiet trust.
Different does not mean disconnected.
Different means the system needs more than one doorway.
Key Insights
- Social rituals are not universal human requirements.
- Some rituals create connection, while others only enforce conformity.
- Neurodivergent people are often misread when systems prioritize performance over function.
- Flexible participation improves inclusion without lowering standards.
- Human systems become stronger when they design for real nervous systems, not idealized social behavior.

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