Anonymous wrote:Some more mother in law comments:
Thank GOD he's good looking. I'd rather he be good looking and stupid than ugly and smart.
Well I was really hoping you wouldn't give me a grandchild with a disability, but at least you didn't give me an ugly grandchild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My twins are not necessarily considered special needs (yet), but a friend's husband said this (our twins were in the NICU for 2 months):
"At least you didn't have to deal with all of the hard stuff of having a newborn when your kids were born. When they came home they had already past the hard, newborn phase." LOLOL FU!
I got "You're so lucky he has that feeding tube! I worry all the time about what little Larla eats."
Same mom told me I was lucky not to have a high earning husband, because I could work without feeling guilty, plus I didn't have the headache of overseeing the cleaning of such a big home.
Anonymous wrote:Regarding the "if they knew this back in the day, then my fill in the blank relative would have been diagnosed," I think about this from time to time. Often wonder how lives may have turned out for folks I knew as a kid if there had been early intervention. I doubt I would say this to a SN parent, but believe me, I definitely think it about kids from my childhood.
Anonymous wrote:Einstein didn't speak until he was four*!
*or whatever age the person pulls from their ass that day.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This has actually come out of my MIL's mouth several times: My daughter is so pretty that it doesn't matter if she does well in school or not. My daughter will find a nice guy to support her when she becomes an adult. We shouldn't waste our money or efforts on educational testing, IEP meetings, and tutoring.
This is the mentality of my in-laws with regard to females. Actually it's even the mentality of a friend of mine. She wishes it was her daughter who was the one with learning issues instead of her son and she wishes her daughter wasn't so driven and competitive because she says it will hard to marry her off if she becomes too successful.
Anonymous wrote:This has actually come out of my MIL's mouth several times: My daughter is so pretty that it doesn't matter if she does well in school or not. My daughter will find a nice guy to support her when she becomes an adult. We shouldn't waste our money or efforts on educational testing, IEP meetings, and tutoring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My twins are not necessarily considered special needs (yet), but a friend's husband said this (our twins were in the NICU for 2 months):
"At least you didn't have to deal with all of the hard stuff of having a newborn when your kids were born. When they came home they had already past the hard, newborn phase." LOLOL FU!
I got "You're so lucky he has that feeding tube! I worry all the time about what little Larla eats."
Same mom told me I was lucky not to have a high earning husband, because I could work without feeling guilty, plus I didn't have the headache of overseeing the cleaning of such a big home.
Anonymous wrote:My twins are not necessarily considered special needs (yet), but a friend's husband said this (our twins were in the NICU for 2 months):
"At least you didn't have to deal with all of the hard stuff of having a newborn when your kids were born. When they came home they had already past the hard, newborn phase." LOLOL FU!