I hate how this article constantly treats autism as "something you have" rather than "something you are". I don't "have autism" or "live with autism" (at least not in the sense that they're using it). I just <i>am autistic</i>.<p>I do appreciate that they say "autistic people" a few times, but leading with phrasing that makes autism look like some sort of disease or mental illness certainly makes me cringe a bit.