Well said. Anything that 'normalizes' an experience one has that's treated as 'abnormal' by others is helpful.
Also, this:
"It is a very necessary wakeup call to consider that your own perspective does not work for everyone. And that goes for any person, whether autistic or not."
Personally I do not support use of terms like "neurotypical." There's a neuro-spectrum with many dimensions, and everyone is somewhere a bit and/or a lot different on it. If we allow a certain group that clusters together in one part of the spectrum to claim "typical" or "normal," we impose "atypical" and "abnormal" on everyone else. I put this in the same category of behavior as systemic racism, sexism, etc.