Of course.
But that reply to the OP was sniping and exclusionist to the point of smacking of ignorance. Perhaps the person is not aware that they are everywhere surrounded by people who are autistic, who have ADHD, or a combination. There are other forms of ND as well... and the more they are welcomed and supported, the better. Things tend to go south not because the ND people are incapable, but because the nuerotypicals are demanding, normative, hostile, and have a tendency to escalate stuff. There is considerable research data on this from the realm of conversation analysis (a method often applied to clinical settings, courtrooms, classrooms, and therapy practices to figure out how people communicate power, control their positions in interactions and so on). The data say at the most fundamental level for ND-NT interactions, that it is the NTs who are the drivers of poor interactions.
I have been relieved to see the voices of people with ND experience first hand or in the company of ND beloveds on camino...
I am also grateful that I was recently on the trail and could see that on the ground, the realities of camino are far less rigid and exclusive than they can be on the forum.
On the ground:
- nobody gets bent out of shape about who is carrying a pack or staying in a private room.
- I never saw anyone berate a person using a CPAP machine.
- The elderly and the "jovenes" hung out with each other, and nobody seemed to make broad swath generlizations about generations...
- And nobody told anyone to go home, that they were not welcome, that they were fools for having come...
- Sometimes I heard a person comforted about a decision to go home, but never berated for having tried.
- I have, in 8 caminos seen a handful of confrontational behaviour... always with alcohol involved.
But the conflation of serious structural health impediments with ND lived realities I have seen at different points on the forum... and the viciousness is breathtaking. Some years back, when I was but a lurking, nonsubscriber reader, a member sought advice about walking at night and staying in private accommodation during the day, and the chorus response of "how dare you bring a person with a sleep disability to ruin my camino?" response was shocking.
But pushing a wheelchair? That gets rounds of applause and encouragement (mostly for the pusher).
I smell ableism and a desire for inspiration porn...
Thankfully, it's not part of the camino routes that I love, populated as they are by people who take up the lay ministry of keeping the path alive for *all of us*.