Anonymous wrote:Good god, op here. Your willful insistence on completely refusing to comprehend what I actually said is amazing. I did it ask for special accommodations. I asked that you keep your babies out of playgrounds marked 3-5 and out of the big kid pool arear for 3-5 when there are baby parks and baby playgrounds. You hover over your kids creating a huge logistical block for those of us with kids with special needs who need to closely monitor. You also hugely react if my child say blows a raspberry in your direction. That's not hurrying anyone. It's annoying. Maybe it warrants a telling him off but you frankly can't tell off a child with autism for every odd behavior. So parents telling me, your child just spit at me, etc. these are the issues I'm talking about. My kid isn't aggressive he is odd and it confuses parents more than children.
If you have a hard time believing that my child hasn't been yelled at numerous times for things like making faces at babies, growling at them, spitting, not waiting a turn even when I'm there to hold him back, you don't live in my world and Rabat my point.
As for the other kids with autism being similar I didn't say all but seeking reactions is indeed fairly common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am not putting my kid in a floatie because there are other kids with autism out there. That's insane.
Ohhh, I thought OP meant to NOT let your kid bring their floats into the kiddie area or NOT show up with lots of toys and get mad when her kid wants to appropriate them.
Either way, what OP is requesting is just not something parents are going to do. At least not in my experience with most parents around here.
Anonymous wrote:OP, one part of the problem, besides your aggressive/combative/attack-first tone, is your word choice. Is your auto-correct overzealously changing your words? Are you unfamiliar with your phone keyboard, or is English not your first language? It's not easy to tell exactly what you're saying in your posts, other than that you're mad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this thread has done is make OP look bad. I know most parents of kids with SN aren't like this because of personal experiences (my own family and my career), but I'm fearful someone else will read her post and think this is the majority opinion.
How exactly? Do explain. This is op. I'm very invited over in the sn community. I see kids treated like this all the time. It's h
Why I send my kid to special needs school and avoid many situations. I certainly have not failed my child. I've advocated for him and gotten him the best help possible.
So suggesting that other parents could not glare at my child when he does unexpected and odd things - I've mentioned blowing raspberries, pouring out water, growling, odd movements - oh and also not bringing babies into the areas clearly marked for preschoolers - I an making us all look bad.
Do you think maybe there is some massive projection there?
I never ever said we don't take my kid home when he misbehaves. Adult. I never said we don't do therapy or seek professional help - believe me, we do. Others can't afford all the help we have however and they have it worse.
People want to be able to think negatively of parents with kids with. What looks like bad behavior, not all kids with special needs have what looks like bad behavior although many do, and these people will not be told they are wrong. That's the upshot of the thread in a nutshell.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All this thread has done is make OP look bad. I know most parents of kids with SN aren't like this because of personal experiences (my own family and my career), but I'm fearful someone else will read her post and think this is the majority opinion.
How exactly? Do explain. This is op. I'm very invited over in the sn community. I see kids treated like this all the time. It's h
Why I send my kid to special needs school and avoid many situations. I certainly have not failed my child. I've advocated for him and gotten him the best help possible.
So suggesting that other parents could not glare at my child when he does unexpected and odd things - I've mentioned blowing raspberries, pouring out water, growling, odd movements - oh and also not bringing babies into the areas clearly marked for preschoolers - I an making us all look bad.
Do you think maybe there is some massive projection there?
I never ever said we don't take my kid home when he misbehaves. Adult. I never said we don't do therapy or seek professional help - believe me, we do. Others can't afford all the help we have however and they have it worse.
People want to be able to think negatively of parents with kids with. What looks like bad behavior, not all kids with special needs have what looks like bad behavior although many do, and these people will not be told they are wrong. That's the upshot of the thread in a nutshell.
Anonymous wrote:I am not putting my kid in a floatie because there are other kids with autism out there. That's insane.
Anonymous wrote:All this thread has done is make OP look bad. I know most parents of kids with SN aren't like this because of personal experiences (my own family and my career), but I'm fearful someone else will read her post and think this is the majority opinion.
Anonymous wrote:Also - op here - those of you who got so very angry. Why on earth? I did not at any point suggest I was going to let my child injure or even annoy yours if at all possible, and you just lost it. Many of you. I'm thinking any suggestion that you might be being an asshole when you act in a way that you excuse as protecting your child or going all mama bear might in fact be bad behavior is just too much for your limited world view.
And no I'm not taking this down. I think asking for some acceptance and the vitriol and excuses it stirred up is telling and demonstrative of the problem. In the meantime i just carry on doing the best I can and avoiding the ones that are obviously dicks.
Anonymous wrote:Eh, OP, the world, and I think especially the DMV area, has some jerky people in it. You can either obsess about them or ignore them and focus on the good people instead. I think option B is better. I mean, I get it to a degree - the other week, my DS was playing in an adapted sports league and the opposing team would not lend us any players, even though the number of kids on each team was horribly unbalanced. I got really upset, because I expected more of parents of children with SN, and was ranting about the situation to DS and DH, and pretty much letting it ruin my whole afternoon. But its one game, one day, one lousy group of parents, and really, the only people I was hurting by obsessing about the injustice of it were DS and myself.
Anonymous wrote:Also - op here - those of you who got so very angry. Why on earth? I did not at any point suggest I was going to let my child injure or even annoy yours if at all possible, and you just lost it. Many of you. I'm thinking any suggestion that you might be being an asshole when you act in a way that you excuse as protecting your child or going all mama bear might in fact be bad behavior is just too much for your limited world view.
And no I'm not taking this down. I think asking for some acceptance and the vitriol and excuses it stirred up is telling and demonstrative of the problem. In the meantime i just carry on doing the best I can and avoiding the ones that are obviously dicks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. This is wild. So I have anger issues, my kid is much more severely autistic than I think, we shouldn't leave the house, I'm doing it all wrong and need therapy. This is why this is all so hard. It's not my kid and his different way of learning and being that is the real struggle it's knowing that he will have to face people like you his whole life. And I wasn't seeking your advice or your insults. I really don't care. I have been very successful and I personally and a huge rule follower and major people pleaser which has been a struggle to manage. But I do think those of you who are the most intolerant get some perspective. You may need to ask for it someday.
And yes parents of kids with special needs still say normal, btw. It's allowed. We do understand that some of our kids behaviors are abnormal and I'm not going to debate word choices.
OP, I get what you're are saying, totally. The general parent board is not welcoming to SN kids and their parents, as you can see. It's so telling that people think you shouldn't even leave the house. It's the worst advice, because a child who never gets out never learns to function.
Meanwhile, the typical kids are spitting, hitting, kicking, etc. and no one bats an eye.
I also think you are so right about challenges coming down the road for these higher-than-mighty, not my problem parents.
Anonymous wrote:If your son is taking my child's ball or not letting my kid on the swing and you do nothing about it, OP, I am going to say something to your child. Your child is interfering my my child's happiness. My child doesn't see your son as anything but another little boy and I cannot let her think I don't have her back when I allow your son to bug her.
I am sorry for your plight - I truly am. But you are asking too much.