Do you know this from experience?Unlimited front of the line access and unlimited ride looping = run of the parks.
Do you know this from experience?Unlimited front of the line access and unlimited ride looping = run of the parks.
agreedFrom what school did you receive your medical degree?
If that's your opinion, then that's your opinion. But it's uninformed and you've basically said you're unwilling to become better educated. That's the part I don't understand, the desire to not learn more about the world and the people around you.
From what school did you receive your medical degree?
If that's your opinion, then that's your opinion. But it's uninformed and you've basically said you're unwilling to become better educated. That's the part I don't understand, the desire to not learn more about the world and the people around you.
Do you know this from experience?
I had teachers when I was a kid just like you. I am glad your kids have you. I am a successful person supporting a family of four because of teachers just like youI've been a teacher in Newtown, CT for 18 years, and also have two children with autism. One of the things I frequently say to my students is that fair doesn't mean everyone gets the same thing, fair means everyone gets what they need. Imagine what "equal" would look like in a typical classroom...the kids above grade level would be bored because they already mastered the curriculum, the at-risk children struggle because they don't have the tools to be successful, and the few "typical" children get what they need. This "equal" treatment would be a huge disservice to the bulk of the children. Fair would mean differentiating instruction so that each and every child gets what they need at their level. This may not be that different. In my case, fair would be waiting in the regular queue with my high-functioning daughter for Enchanted Tales with Belle, while my more affected son gets his sensory needs met using the GAC to ride Astro Orbiter. He wants to ride it, because it does fulfill a need...some sensory experience I can't quite understand that is satisfied both by the vertical elevator ride and the spinning cars. We won't ride it repeatedly, but we will revisit it over and over over the week. And we won't be gloating...we will be exhaling. With relief. With gratitude. Someone understands. Maybe fair does mean everyone gets what they need. I truly want that for every child,
Forgive me, I've always waited in a line that was accessible to "someone with a physical disability" trust me it aint run of the parkI don't think they are saying they do. It's only logical. If you never wait in a line and you ride it as many times and you want it's like having free run of the park. Unless you would call it something else.
Unlimited front of the line access and unlimited ride looping = run of the parks.
Forgive me, I've always waited in a line that was accessible to "someone with a physical disability" trust me it aint run of the park
so old room keys = a GAC.... ???? This thread is for people that acknowledge the use and abuse of a GAC not use using old room keys. THAT is abusing the systemObviously you had to wait! But if you were the person from earlier that commented that they had already figured out a way to beat the new system by using old room keys to get multiple fast passes to allow her daughter to ride the ride multiple rides over and over each weekend then you would have to agree that would be a way to get unlimited access. Therefore the comment run of the park fits for that situation.
so old room keys = a GAC.... ???? This thread is for people that acknowledge the use and abuse of a GAC not use using old room keys. THAT is abusing the system
no, I'm not being sarcastic, I am agreeing with you that they are cheating the system, but I disagree with your example in relation to my original post that you quoted. I would call that CHEATING THE SYSTEM like I already saidYou are obviously being sarcastic. No if you go back and read page 17. A poster talks about using her new DAS pass, FP+ and old room keys to get her daughter to be able to ride the rides she wants at DHS essentially letting her loop the rides. It's okay you can admit someone with an autistic child cheats using a GAC Or DAS. Shocking I know someone with a disability can cheat the system also.
I had teachers when I was a kid just like you. I am glad your kids have you. I am a successful person supporting a family of four because of teachers just like you
See, this is the kind of thing that drives me and others nuts. This is his lot in life, the cards he was dealt with his son, and while it completely sucks, why would he think that WDW or any place for that matter should look at his situation and say, "oh well, he spends the same amount of money on a ticket but can't stay long so we should just let him on all of the rides first with no wait."??? My feet KILL me by the end of the day to where I feel this side of crippled trying to walk, and I too would LOVE for someone to feel sorry for me but I'm not entitled to that. Disney is a luxury, and if you can't manage it, you just can't manage it. None of us get to do absolutely everything that the parks offer, due to many reasons. Be it, I only have enough money to go for one day, or the lines were too long so I had to pick and chose which things were must do's. Should WDW feel obligated to make sure that I get to bypass the lines because I'm too poor to afford more days at the parks? I'm sorry that these children are afflicted with these things, but a Disney trip is NOT a God given right but everyone has this sense of entitlement these days of "me and my kid first".
I've been a teacher in Newtown, CT for 18 years, and also have two children with autism. One of the things I frequently say to my students is that fair doesn't mean everyone gets the same thing, fair means everyone gets what they need. Imagine what "equal" would look like in a typical classroom...the kids above grade level would be bored because they already mastered the curriculum, the at-risk children struggle because they don't have the tools to be successful, and the few "typical" children get what they need. This "equal" treatment would be a huge disservice to the bulk of the children. Fair would mean differentiating instruction so that each and every child gets what they need at their level. This may not be that different. In my case, fair would be waiting in the regular queue with my high-functioning daughter for Enchanted Tales with Belle, while my more affected son gets his sensory needs met using the GAC to ride Astro Orbiter. He wants to ride it, because it does fulfill a need...some sensory experience I can't quite understand that is satisfied both by the vertical elevator ride and the spinning cars. We won't ride it repeatedly, but we will revisit it over and over over the week. And we won't be gloating...we will be exhaling. With relief. With gratitude. Someone understands. Maybe fair does mean everyone gets what they need. I truly want that for every child,
No one is attacking anyone, just stating opinions...and here's mine...and all comments exclude any child at WDW with Make a Wish or similar organization.
No one needs front of the line access, not even guests with cognitive disabilities. They can wait in a comfortable place and show up when it's their turn.
No one needs to ride the same ride multiple times without waiting. It's completely unfair to the guests that paid the same (or more) than the family that is demanding that all six of them be able to ride an attraction four or five times with no wait.
No guest should feel that they have the right to continuously negatively impact the experience of other guests just because their child was born with different abilities.
Having a rough life 51 weeks out of the year has nothing to do with what you should expect at WDW - the two are unrelated.
Special needs doesn't mean special in the sense that your needs trump everyone else's. Your kids are no more special than my kids, and they don't deserve an experience that is any better than what my kids should expect.
You are very ignorant, it's not about anyone's sore feet. No one with a child with ASD feels any sense of entitlement. What I do feel is the piercing stares of ignorant people like you when the sensory overload hit my son and he starts breaking down. I have heard other "parents" refer to him as a brat. calls to "get control" of my son....the GAC limited our exposure to people like you....
This type of perseverative behavior is by definition a part of the disability of autism. Not a want. No one wants this, believe me. While my family doesn't have to deal with this as a ride issue, we deal with it day in and day out with other issues. The same obsessions go on for months, sometimes years.
If Disney didn't see this as being a part of the disability, they would not allow for it.
Really, who would want to ride these rides over and over unless they had an obsession that they couldn't control.
You're confusing something that someone does for enjoyment with something that someone does because if they didn't it would cause extreme distress because of a disability.
Cheaters, aka non-disabled using someone else's GAC was not the biggest problem. The biggest problem is that so many people were requesting, and getting, a GAC.
Had Disney stuck with the original intent of the DAS, i.e., everyone waits, but not necessarily in line, the value of the DAS would have dropped considerably, and fewer people would have gotten them.
By now apparently capitulating and once again simply taking the word of someone that their child can't wait at all and "needs" (translation: wants) to ride the same ride multiple times, the DAS will be just as much of a mess as the GAC.