I appreciate so much about this piece! I wanted to foremost thank you for your powerful and important words. I shared this with all of my colleagues. I also wanted to offer an alternative perspective to your brief comments on applied behavior analysis (ABA). Despite the pervasive quality control issues in the field, as well as a continuing need to evolve in response to the concerns you noted, at the core of the philosophy of ABA is the notion that what society deems as “problem” behavior is actually adaptive for the individual. “Problem behavior” communicates the individual’s (often basic) needs. Your section on motivation reminded me a lot of this philosophy. Over the past four decades, behavior analysts have developed methods to safely understand the motivation behind dangerous problem behaviors, even when a person cannot communicate their needs with verbal language. Behavior analysts use this information to develop individualized programs that teach new skills to both the autistic individual and their caregivers that will help meet the autistic individuals’ needs. Sometimes the focus is more so on changing the caregivers’ behavior (e.g., teaching the caregiver how to support the autistic individual better in school activities or how to modify the activities to make them more enjoyable for the autistic individual) and sometimes the focus is on building outlets of communication for the autistic individual. The primary goal is to improve the autistic individuals’ quality of life and wellbeing. Behavior analysts have also developed methods to understand people’s preferences, even when the person cannot vocally communicate them. Individualized choice and preference are the heartbeat of applied behavior analysis and should be two key components in every behavioral intervention. Again, I recognize that the current state of behavior analytic practice is often not reflective of some of these core philosophies and gold-standard methodologies, but many behavior analysts are working hard to fix that! As one of them, I want to thank you again for sharing your insights and expertise, and for being open to continued conversations like the one you had with Dr. Gupta. I am sure, like Dr. Gupta, I will continue to make mistakes (I likely have made some in this comment, and I welcome everyone’s feedback); I only hope that people in my life are as willing as you are to continue these important conversations and strive for mutual growth!