THEY WERE RIGHT.
FROM Outside
PHOTOGRAPHS BY ERIKA LARSEN
A BALL OF FIRE WITH TWINKLING BLUE EYES, ROBERT ARTHUR WOOD JR., A FOUR-FOOT-SIX, 70-POUND EIGHT-YEAR-OLD, GIVES AS GOOD AS HE GETS WHEN HE AND HIS BROTHER, RYAN, A YEAR YOUNGER, SCRAP OVER A TOY. AND YET ROBERT CAN’T TALK, SWIM, SIT STILL FOR A MOVIE, OR USE THE BATHROOM BY HIMSELF. HE HAPPENS TO BE SEVERELY AUTISTIC.
Ryan, also autistic but less so, hugs and kisses his brother. Robert is not as affectionate. But like many children with autism, Robert is fearless. As a toddler, he liked to climb on top of the television and the refrigerator. He also likes to wander. At Walmart, Robert’s mother, Barbara Locker, still puts him in the shopping cart. If he’s not held by…