The Minnesota State Fair can be noisy, noisome, crowded, overheated, overfed fun.
The fair can be a lot. The fair can be too much.
Some people struggle to process the fair's deep-fried sensory overload. This year, the Minnesota State Fair itself hopes to help.
Jillian Nelson prepped for a day at the fair like a mountaineer summiting a peak with hostile terrain but spectacular views.
"As an autistic adult," she said, "I would watch the weather and I would purposefully go on a day it was going to be raining. I would go early in the morning and as soon as it started to get even an inkling of crowded, I was out of there."
She pored over fairground maps, planned her routes and set out on each day's adventure with supportive friends and a backpack full of tools. Noise-canceling headphones, fidget toys, a cooling cloth, her favorite water bottle filled with water from home.
"It meant that my fair trips were very, very dictated by other people's habits and other people's choices," said Nelson, community resource and policy advocate for the Autism Society of Minnesota. "Sometimes it meant I got to see all the things I wanted and taste all the things I wanted. Sometimes it meant that I had to pull the parachute cord and jump out of the plane earlier than I was ready for."
Every year, fair organizers work to make the 12-day celebration more accessible. It wouldn't be a Great Minnesota Get-Together without all of us.