Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, parent with a child with HFA here. Please don't let your child's diagnosis become an excuse for bad behavior. That is doing no favors to your child.
I'm not saying I'm perfect. I'm the opposite of it. But If my kid spit at someone we would immediately go home. We would work a lot on interactions involving not spitting. One on one play dates, etc. We would have a reminder every time we went to the playground that one spit means we are going home.
What do the professionals that you are working with suggest that you do?
Doesn't seem like OP is working with any professionals her only tools are yell and ignore.
You are ridiculous. We do therapy 6 days a week. Behavioral therapy for years. You don't understand and that's fine. There's simply no point in trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, I don't understand why you would not apologize to another adult if your child spat at them. You don't owe them any explanation of his medical history, a simple "sorry" would do the trick. Then move on.
Dude obviously I do this. You're being deliberately obtuse.
I say sorry. I avoid crowded parks. I follow him. I help him facilitate social situations. We do thousands of hours of therapy. But the kid looks normal and is of normal intelligence and has normal speech. So people have zero tolerance of him doing odd things. I mentioned spitting. Others are pouring out water or making odd noises. Honestly things that don't affect people. I'm sorry if blowing rasbwperroes is offensive but we have enough fish to fry that I may not be making the huge deal do it you think I should be. I'm not asking for special accommodations. I'm asking for tolerance. Also if I tell you he has autism I'm not asking for an excuse. Unless he hurt your or did something really wrong, I don't need one. It's an explanation.
This entire thereaf just hits home how deep the refusal to be understanding truly is. You all deliberately misconstrued what I was saying to tell me about how you didn't have to. And special accommodations or how I was failing at parenting. Not it at all. People refuse to make reasonable choices on tolerance. If it was a kid with an obvious disability you'd all be falling. Over yourselves to demonstrate understanding. So ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, parent with a child with HFA here. Please don't let your child's diagnosis become an excuse for bad behavior. That is doing no favors to your child.
I'm not saying I'm perfect. I'm the opposite of it. But If my kid spit at someone we would immediately go home. We would work a lot on interactions involving not spitting. One on one play dates, etc. We would have a reminder every time we went to the playground that one spit means we are going home.
What do the professionals that you are working with suggest that you do?
Doesn't seem like OP is working with any professionals her only tools are yell and ignore.
You are ridiculous. We do therapy 6 days a week. Behavioral therapy for years. You don't understand and that's fine. There's simply no point in trying.
Please print out this thread and show it to your child's therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, parent with a child with HFA here. Please don't let your child's diagnosis become an excuse for bad behavior. That is doing no favors to your child.
I'm not saying I'm perfect. I'm the opposite of it. But If my kid spit at someone we would immediately go home. We would work a lot on interactions involving not spitting. One on one play dates, etc. We would have a reminder every time we went to the playground that one spit means we are going home.
What do the professionals that you are working with suggest that you do?
Doesn't seem like OP is working with any professionals her only tools are yell and ignore.
You are ridiculous. We do therapy 6 days a week. Behavioral therapy for years. You don't understand and that's fine. There's simply no point in trying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. If she corrected her son for spitting, why would the other parent then proceed to tell her that the kid spat at them? If she didn't correct him yet, the only response to the other parent is, "yes, I know, sorry," and then proceed to correct the kid. What other interaction with the other parent would anyone have at that point?
It's because the other parents don't think she's corrected him harshly enough, basically. They want to see the kid punished for reasons that have nothing to do with actually helping the kid learn better behavior. Ask me how I know ...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[quote=]
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.
.
If you were a child spits at a young child or baby; I WILL say any quiet but stern voice "do not do that." And I will do that even if you were standing right there, and I would expect you to back me up on teaching your child that that is not acceptable behavior. It takes a village, OP,
Anonymous wrote:OP, I don't understand why you would not apologize to another adult if your child spat at them. You don't owe them any explanation of his medical history, a simple "sorry" would do the trick. Then move on.
Anonymous wrote:[quote=]
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.
.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. If she corrected her son for spitting, why would the other parent then proceed to tell her that the kid spat at them? If she didn't correct him yet, the only response to the other parent is, "yes, I know, sorry," and then proceed to correct the kid. What other interaction with the other parent would anyone have at that point?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Your kid spitting at someone isn't okay it's just not.
- mom of kid with autism
SHE IS NOT SAYING IT'S OK. She's asking for a little understanding. Unfortunately I agree with PPs that the best thing she can do is just not GAF about other parents' reactions, because there is much less empathy in the world than one would hope.
That's not what OP said.
Are you OP sock-puppeting?
No, it's not op sock puppeting. This is op. If I tell my child off or redirect him as we have established with professionals help I don't need your reaction or telling him off also nor do I need a scolding. I wouldn't dream of doing this to another child -- and I have an older child who is typical so I do understand that world also.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Your kid spitting at someone isn't okay it's just not.
- mom of kid with autism
SHE IS NOT SAYING IT'S OK. She's asking for a little understanding. Unfortunately I agree with PPs that the best thing she can do is just not GAF about other parents' reactions, because there is much less empathy in the world than one would hope.
That's not what OP said.
Are you OP sock-puppeting?