

I'm currently reading an article, "Autism's First Child," in The Atlantic about Donald Triplett, who was the first child diagnosed with autism (1943). He is currently 77, lives in Forest, Mississippi in his own house, and golfs everyday. For the next week or so, I'm going to discuss some of the article's main issues, which primarily deal with our society and autism in adulthood. Here is one interesting quote that I've come across so far:
"We can dispense with the layers of sorrow, and interpret autism as but one more wrinkle in the fabric of humanity. Practically speaking, this does not mean pretending that adults with autism do not need help. But it does mean replacing pity toward them with ambition for them. The key to this view is a recognition that 'they' are part of 'us,' so that those who don't have autism are actively rooting for those who do" (p. 81).
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