‘Reveal all your thoughts and feelings regularly to a trusted person.’
Decades ago, when I was an evangelical student, there was some pressure in the circles I moved in to be completely open with one another. This was something I found impossibly stressful. Hopko’s 14th maxim is much more nuanced than this, but it can still sound threatening to autistic Christians However, this is not a demand to become emotionally ‘transparent’ in a socially neurotypical way, nor to over-share with people who have not earned your trust. Rather, it is an invitation to step out of the isolation of your own head by choosing at least one safe person – a priest, therapist, close friend, spouse, or spiritual mother/father – before whom you can gradually bring your inner world: your scruples, special-interest worries, sensory fears, anger, joy, and confusion. The point is not to perform piety, but to stop carrying everything alone and to let Christ meet you through another person who knows you are autistic and honours that reality.
Because many autistic people have been gaslit or punished for ‘too much honesty’, this maxim requires clear boundaries and structures. You might agree on regular, time-limited check-ins (e.g., once a week for 30 minutes), use bullet points or written notes to organize what you want to say, or give advanced warning if you need concrete feedback instead of vague reassurance. ‘Revealing thoughts’ can include naming sensory overload and meltdowns, describing masking fatigue, confessing when you have fixated on a fear or resentment, or simply saying, ‘My body and brain feel strange and I don’t know why.’ You do not have to share with everyone; part of this maxim is about learning who is actually trustworthy, and giving yourself permission to withhold your inner life from people who mock, minimize, or spiritualize away your autistic experience.
For many autistic Christians, written communication will be the most truthful and least overwhelming way to live this maxim. You might email your priest before confession with the main themes you need to discuss, keep a private journal that you sometimes share in part, or send a message to a trusted friend when you notice yourself getting into a vicious spiral of shame or anger. An autistic-aware therapist, psychiatrist, or support group can also be a legitimate fulfilment of this maxim, especially when your thoughts and feelings are shaped by trauma, OCD, anxiety, or depression as well as by autism.
Lived this way, ‘revealing all your thoughts and feelings’ does not erase your need for solitude or your preference for clarity; instead, it becomes a gentle, structured practice of stepping out of lonely hyper-reflection into communion, where another person helps you sort what is truly sin, what is suffering, and where the mercy of God is already at work.
