The Chit Chat Chit Chat Thread

Figgy1

Premium Member
I cannot believe they are closing it. I always enjoyed going there. Very sad. :(
Sympathy like. I have a friend who was thinking about a last minute trip in the beginning of December after today's phone call the reply was maybe next year:( I'm not even going to tell my dh another of his favorite benches is leaving because he didn't handle Energy leaving well at all.
 

donaldtoo

Well-Known Member

Goofyernmost

Well-Known Member
Don't worry about it, as @MySmallWorldof4 said. It's a manipulation thing to try to get what she wants. Think about it this way: if she had grandparents who lived closer and they indulged her the same way her father does, wouldn't she be saying the same thing?

It sounds like you're standing your ground, and she's just being three. The good thing about her being three is that she probably won't remember most of this and it won't be as hard on her as it would be if she were older.
Kids are a lot more clever then we think. Here is this little human, too small to intimidate because of size and strength, at that stage uneducated in any advance skills and complex thoughts. Their only defense is somehow to manipulate their bigger, stronger foes is to play on emotions. If you don't think they can see and register your reaction... think again. They know that saying something like that will be their only chance of getting what they want. It's called playing one parent against the other and for some reason, maybe as a built in survival method, they instinctively find a way to get parents to give up and give them what they want.

It has no evil intent, that doesn't even occur to them, they just have quickly figured out how to get what they want by sensing the emotions of those closest to them. That time it was by favoring the Father... you can bet that it happens on the other end as well which is why the Father gets her more things then he normally would. Competition!

#separatedparentsareawealthofguilt
 

donaldtoo

Well-Known Member
Rant coming up, feel free to skip it.
So I was at work tonight and we went up for break and one of the temp workers who gets called in when we don't have enough people to cover everything was there and she was asking me how it's going with DS at the special education school, if he likes it. I was telling her that yes, he loves it, and some of the latest "happenings". Like that he was chosen to do a special project group for kids who can handle more than the regular curriculum offered, and today was the first day of that and that he said it was really hard and he didn't really have fun because one kid kept talking over him and also taking his ideas, etc. And this gal I don't know, she must be new there, asks me what he has. And I said Autism, and she says "Yes, but what form? My son has aspergers." and I said they didn't specify a "type", they just call it Autism Spectrum Disorder''. And she goes on to tell me that it's all a bunch of nonsense anyway, because all she had to do with her son is explain the reason for something and he's fine. Because NO ONE likes to hear "No" without knowing why, even adults, and nowadays, any kid that a teacher doesn't know how to handle is told they have autism. Her son's teacher just didn't know what to do with him. I didn't really know what to say, so I kept talking to the original temp person I had been talking to, about how we're making lists to hang around the house with step by step instructions of how to do things like set the table, what he's supposed to do when he gets home from school, because he keeps forgetting things and we have to call him back to empty is school bag, or get it from his bike bags, etc. And the temp gal says that yes, she's heard that structure is important and they don't like surprises. And I said no, DS needs to know what we're going to be doing when. And the new gal breaks in to tell me I just need to tell him we're going to surprise him...that will fix it because that's what she does with her son. I kind of shrugged and said that every kid is different. She says "No really!! That will fix it!"

First off, I wanted to ask her if she had medical degrees and was an expert in the field of Autism, why is she working at a warehouse for minimum wage?? 2nd, she'd never met me and she certainly hasn't met my kids...how does SHE know what will help MY kid? Isn't it incredibly rude to tell someone else what they are and aren't going through? Like "No, there's no such thing as cancer....you just need to change your diet and everything will be fine!" She said her kid has Asbergers, but also said that the teacher just didn't know what to do with him, so told them he has aspergers. Teachers don't make a diagnosis...if the teacher is telling you your child is showing behavior that might indicate a disorder, they will most likely ask you to consider getting him tested for it. That's not a diagnosis, and if your kid is struggling and you just don't want to admit that there's something going on, by all means, bury your head in the sand, but don't tell me that MY kid doesn't have a disorder because you can't admit that your kid does too. Or maybe your kid is just a spoiled brat that the teacher can't handle. I don't know....I haven't met your kid. But I didn't say that, I just walked away because break was over and I didn't want to say something rude and get in trouble.

I asked my coworker whose son goes to the same school as mine if she thought the exchange was as weird as I did. (She was sitting on my other side) She kind of rolled her eyes and said "That woman doesn't know what she's talking about because she doesn't have a kid with Autism. Just ignore her. WE know what we go through with our kids and she's obviously never been through that." And she's completely right....it just frustrated me and put my back up because I just never would have told another parent that their child's diagnosis was nothing but hooey, especially someone I'd just met 2 minutes before. It minimizes everything we went through up to this point, like it doesn't exist and I'm just a bad mom for not knowing how to solve every issue immediately, and I'm being stupid for making instructions to hang around the house to remind DS of how to do his chores. It just really bugged me.

Rant over. You may now return to your regularly scheduled chit-chatting.

So many “experts” out there. :rolleyes:
There is a reason it’s called the autism spectrum...

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