Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
So, my child has really profound special needs (so she would have no clue someone was making fun of her — she is a baby cognitively). What I find interesting is that we have encountered nothing but kindness in over a decade. Her sister’s friends have never made fun of her being in a diaper, using a sippy cup, drooling, etc. It seems like higher functioning kids that still have cognitive and behavioral issues are treated poorly, but at some point the situation becomes so atypical that people stop being jerks.
Yes, I think it’s more of an issue when the child appears “normal.” But many people who are gay, trans, poly, etc. are not obviously such. Acceptance should not hinge on awareness of a difference.
Did you just compare polyamorous adults to a child with profound special needs? Just stop.
Okay. Sure. No. I compared intolerance to intolerance. Tossing out stupid internet speak in retort is not the comeback you think it is. It’s meaningless claptrap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
So, my child has really profound special needs (so she would have no clue someone was making fun of her — she is a baby cognitively). What I find interesting is that we have encountered nothing but kindness in over a decade. Her sister’s friends have never made fun of her being in a diaper, using a sippy cup, drooling, etc. It seems like higher functioning kids that still have cognitive and behavioral issues are treated poorly, but at some point the situation becomes so atypical that people stop being jerks.
Yes, I think it’s more of an issue when the child appears “normal.” But many people who are gay, trans, poly, etc. are not obviously such. Acceptance should not hinge on awareness of a difference.
Did you just compare polyamorous adults to a child with profound special needs? Just stop.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
So, my child has really profound special needs (so she would have no clue someone was making fun of her — she is a baby cognitively). What I find interesting is that we have encountered nothing but kindness in over a decade. Her sister’s friends have never made fun of her being in a diaper, using a sippy cup, drooling, etc. It seems like higher functioning kids that still have cognitive and behavioral issues are treated poorly, but at some point the situation becomes so atypical that people stop being jerks.
Yes, I think it’s more of an issue when the child appears “normal.” But many people who are gay, trans, poly, etc. are not obviously such. Acceptance should not hinge on awareness of a difference.
Anonymous wrote:I mean.... how accepting would you be of your child’s Muslim friend who disagrees with the tenants of the LGBTQ movement? You’re just raising someone with different values, not less bigoted.
Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
So, my child has really profound special needs (so she would have no clue someone was making fun of her — she is a baby cognitively). What I find interesting is that we have encountered nothing but kindness in over a decade. Her sister’s friends have never made fun of her being in a diaper, using a sippy cup, drooling, etc. It seems like higher functioning kids that still have cognitive and behavioral issues are treated poorly, but at some point the situation becomes so atypical that people stop being jerks.
Anonymous wrote:Kids are amazing until parents and society ruin them
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
It’s pretty disgusting how free people feel to be just entirely cruel. People who go around prattling about their liberal ideals and practices on a regular basis. They would be very embarrassed arssed if they knew how unkind they and their children are.
Anonymous wrote:Now if only they can learn to be nice the kids they think are "weird" or who aren't wearing the "right" shoes, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.
Absolutely agree with this and am so sorry that you've had negative experiences. You are absolutely correct in what you say here.
Anonymous wrote:Certainly haven’t found this for my child with special needs but adults are also entirely unaccepting of him too, so it’s not being taught. It’s all “be kind” to people with wheelchairs for example but be as mean as you feel like it to children with cognitive issues etc. Lots of work to be done on that front. Acceptance isn’t innate for some things.