| 7 is too old to be going up to other kids and innocently asking questions like that. At 5, I would say they were genuinely curious. I would respond with "why do you ask?" |
I think you were responding to me. No, I don't think that at ALL. But at least in a smaller town, you eventually know everyone and you aren't surrounded by mostly strangers day after day after day. There is good and bad in it. |
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My dd has ADHD, not exactly an NT child, but not someone with a visible disability. She goes to camp JCC, and every year comes home telling us about the SN child in her group. She actually gives us a lot of details about the child's abilities, strengths, weaknesses. She is asking someone a lot of detailed questions - or is observing very well. I can't imagine that she's subtle while she is asking,
But, she finds their abilities interestingm like these kids just as they are, and would never be mean on purpose. Empathetic kids are out there! Hang in there! |
I love kids like your DD! |
NP here. Thanks for this advice. OP thank you for posting this. |
I just want to say I know where you are coming from. It drives me crazy when I come to a board for support and people patronize me saying I just misunderstood. Ugh. |
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I'm kind of stumped... My daughter is young so I haven't dealt with this a lot yet
Maybe something like "Do you enjoy being mean? Did you come over here to make her cry?" Kid answers no (or yes if they are a real little shit) "Well, you're not the one in the wheelchair so what do you care? Why don't you just go enjoy your life? Get lost." I am really nice to kids I think are just confused but if I think they are mean I won't play nice. |
I appreciate this but my kid in a wheelchair enjoys life too, a lot, all the time. I would like to get away from this notion that life with a special needs child and for the SN child is constant doom and gloom and burden and despair and catastrophe. There's an outpouring of discontent on this forum because that's what it's for. Just as there's an outpouring of sleep and behavior and food problems on General Parenting. But that doesn't mean that life with babies and toddlers is all problems and that doesn't mean life with my kid is all despair. |
| Both my kids are NT. OP, I don't think that kids are as mean spirited as you think, and many don't even notice other kids may have special needs until 8 or 9. It sounds like the kids approaching you have poor manners but probably aren't malicious. I'd try to formulate a response that isn't rude frankly but that still shuts down the questions. Personally, I wouldn't want to teach my child that obnoxious behavior should be met with more obnoxious behavior, especially when the exchange is between a child and an adult. |
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I'm sorry, but where are these curiosity seekers parents??
Any kid that is innocently asking these questions will be very young and, at a pool, would be (or should be) within ear shot if not arm's reach of their parent. The kid's parents should be intervening and teaching them when to ask questions and when to keep it to themselves. Not knowing the child or their intentions, I'd just ask them where their Mom or Dad is tell them to go ask these questions of them and not you. That should get Mom or Dad off their respective arses and more proactively monitoring their nosy kids and teh inappropriate line of questioning. |
I think you are very naive. |
I think your experience strictly as NT parent is different than those of us with SN kids. |
Right, that's why I'm offering a different perspective. But clearly it isn't wanted. |
What you should be focused on rather than the SN family's reactions is educating your kids about differences of all kinds and how NOT to be obnoxious. No one's child -- your NT dears included -- should be walking over and asking these sorts of questions. No more than they would ask a fat person why they are fat, right? You should be there as their parent to intervene at the very least and not leaving the SN family to worry about responding or how they respond. |
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OP, I would match the kid's tone and push back. "What's wrong with YOU? That's a very rude way to start a conversation and I think you know better." It is hard because they are using the trappings of propriety to be mean...so you do the same.
I am not SN or mother of an SN kid, but I agree with the pps who are closer to this that "nothing is wrong with her" is the wrong way to go. It doesn't acknowledge her clear difference and you lose credibility with the kid--and with your daughter, who is surely painfully aware that she is visibly different. The lesson you're imparting to the rude kids isn't "she's not different" but "differences are not an excuse for rudeness." |