Should we want to cure autism?
I wonder how it went...

Then, shortly after his second birthday, he started to regress." Soon they no longer had a grandchild whom they could imagine becoming a world-beater like Wright himself, but a crisis. "The doctor told us it was normal to regress when a new sibling arrives," he says, evidently still furious. "We lost nine months."
Bovell and her ex-husband, writer Nick Hornby, have a 15-year-old son, Danny, who was born autistic.
beware_the_sluagh wrote:Then, shortly after his second birthday, he started to regress." Soon they no longer had a grandchild whom they could imagine becoming a world-beater like Wright himself, but a crisis. "The doctor told us it was normal to regress when a new sibling arrives," he says, evidently still furious. "We lost nine months."
I wonder if it is the fact that the sibling arrives then, or whether regressions normally happen at that age which just happens to be the most common spacing between children.
yessuh wrote:Bovell and her ex-husband, writer Nick Hornby, have a 15-year-old son, Danny, who was born autistic.
Hmm. According to what way you want to view it, most people agree that all autistics are born autistic or no-one is born autistic. It just seemed a weird statement.

Kaylis-Americanis wrote:But it seems like the people that usually want to "get rid" of autism are the ones that don't have/understand it, and the autistic people I have read comments from all say that we shouldn't try to get rid of it.

adhocisadirtyword wrote:ALASKAN WOLVES
SHOOT PALIN FROM A HELICOPTER
2012
Sophist wrote:Every time Halle Berry makes a horrible entrance, another child turns autistic...
Sophist wrote:I think for many autistics who DO want a cure, that it isn't necessarily the autism that is so painful for them but the depression and the anxiety that we frequently have. Depression is the killer.

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