Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Blah. Just a vent. Took my kids to a restaurant for lunch. One of my kids, he's 10, flaps his hands constantly at his head; he can't help it. At least 3 grown ups at different tables are staring. I'm merely venting. I've becoming SO much stronger, not much gets to me. But every now and again I am aghast at grown ups who should know better. And the lady who stared and then tried continually to get my eyes and give me sympathy look. Arghh! I wanted to fling my food! Just wanted to enjoy our lunch, focus on each other but blah. Okay I'm done.
Get up, walk up to them and tell them there's a fee to pay if they want to continue staring. They'll be so embarrassed they'll stop.
That's what an acquaintance of mine who has a child with Down's syndrome does, and it works.
Anonymous wrote:Blah. Just a vent. Took my kids to a restaurant for lunch. One of my kids, he's 10, flaps his hands constantly at his head; he can't help it. At least 3 grown ups at different tables are staring. I'm merely venting. I've becoming SO much stronger, not much gets to me. But every now and again I am aghast at grown ups who should know better. And the lady who stared and then tried continually to get my eyes and give me sympathy look. Arghh! I wanted to fling my food! Just wanted to enjoy our lunch, focus on each other but blah. Okay I'm done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Sometimes I stare for a few seconds because my kid is staring and asking what's wrong with your kid and I'm figuring it out from watching before I quietly tell her (along with telling her not to stare).
2. Sometimes I stare if I'm stuck physically close (like in line, or next restaurant booth over) and worried I'll get hit if I don't keep an eye out, but I generally try to use peripheral vision for that so I'm NOT staring.
You can't "figure out what's wrong" with someone from a few seconds of watching, and trying to explain someone else in that manner to your child is pretty offensive. Please stop staring.
Sure you can - you can see if it's muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy, down syndrome, fetal alcohol syndrome, etc.
You can look at someone across a restaurant and in a few seconds diagnose muscular dystrophy? That's pretty amazing. Why do they put kids through invasive testing to get that diagnosis then?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Sometimes I stare for a few seconds because my kid is staring and asking what's wrong with your kid and I'm figuring it out from watching before I quietly tell her (along with telling her not to stare).
2. Sometimes I stare if I'm stuck physically close (like in line, or next restaurant booth over) and worried I'll get hit if I don't keep an eye out, but I generally try to use peripheral vision for that so I'm NOT staring.
You can't "figure out what's wrong" with someone from a few seconds of watching, and trying to explain someone else in that manner to your child is pretty offensive. Please stop staring.
Sure you can - you can see if it's muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy, down syndrome, fetal alcohol syndrome, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1. Sometimes I stare for a few seconds because my kid is staring and asking what's wrong with your kid and I'm figuring it out from watching before I quietly tell her (along with telling her not to stare).
2. Sometimes I stare if I'm stuck physically close (like in line, or next restaurant booth over) and worried I'll get hit if I don't keep an eye out, but I generally try to use peripheral vision for that so I'm NOT staring.
You can't "figure out what's wrong" with someone from a few seconds of watching, and trying to explain someone else in that manner to your child is pretty offensive. Please stop staring.
Sure you can - you can see if it's muscular dystrophy, cerebral palsy, down syndrome, fetal alcohol syndrome, etc.