Trying this today!. How is your kiddo with getting up early? If it's possible, adjusting your schedule to be at the park for rope drop would likely really cut down on the lines you are waiting in.

Trying this today!. How is your kiddo with getting up early? If it's possible, adjusting your schedule to be at the park for rope drop would likely really cut down on the lines you are waiting in.
While learning to be able to wait is a necessary skill, it wasn't impatience that impeded (or impedes) my son's waiting, in fact, if he knows what he waiting for and values it, he is very patient. It's more the sensory overload of close people, different smells, being accidentally touched etc. He seems to have a higher tolerance than the OP's daughter, but then, he is a bit older and has had time to process what is and isn't usual, and to learn skills to cope knowing how long it lasts etc. So, waiting in a WDW queue is VERY different from waiting in an airport, or in the relative known quantity that is a usual car etc. Because the sensory triggers are different, less predictable and less controllableThere is just no way that Disney can make the lines shorter than 15 minutes just for you, sorry.I would stick with Character meals for meet and greets if she cant wait standing in a line.
How do you.manage waiting for anything and everything else in your life? Certainly the wait can be longer than 15 minutes! Being in a Car for example. Did you fly: there is lots of waiting in that. How did you.manage the line at disney Security? Probably the transportation to the Parks took 15 minutes or longer....
Hopefully you can get some things accomplished but there is no DAS accommodation to impatience (autism-based or not).
dumb question for you has there been rides down more than usual? if so that could explain longer FP lines as everyone with anytime passes will make other FP lines longer than normalThanks everyone. To clarify, the issue for me is that my kiddo just can't wait in a line that is 30 minutes long. We don't mind waiting outside the line, and aren't trying to get some super quick front of line treatment. The disney website specially says that DAS may not work for guests who have limited time in the parks, and to discuss the need for alternate accommodation with guest services, but it sounds from what you've all said that there simple aren't any other arrangements. Touring Plans estimated this week as 1-3 crowds, which is why we planned this week (from 2000 miles away). I think Disney is handing out a ton of fastpasses at MK in particular, resulting in longer and longer lines, which dilutes the accommodation that was set up several years ago for everyone who may need a DAS.
(For anyone coming in late, the kiddo has autism, can't walk or help transfer, severe epilepsy, a feeding tube, is incontinent and cognitively disabled, we are not trying to get a free ride, but just make the vacation possible.)
Thank you all for your good wishes and excellent suggestions.
And repeated exposure in order to acclimate the person, is the only solution if you aren't going to lock them in their house forever!While learning to be able to wait is a necessary skill, it wasn't impatience that impeded (or impedes) my son's waiting, in fact, if he knows what he waiting for and values it, he is very patient. It's more the sensory overload of close people, different smells, being accidentally touched etc. He seems to have a higher tolerance than the OP's daughter, but then, he is a bit older and has had time to process what is and isn't usual, and to learn skills to cope knowing how long it lasts etc. So, waiting in a WDW queue is VERY different from waiting in an airport, or in the relative known quantity that is a usual car etc. Because the sensory triggers are different, less predictable and less controllable
Not the *only* solution - there is NOTHING like a WDW queue where I live. So, many other coping strategies came into play (INCLUDING the DAS which allows him to wait the same length of time, but not SO much of it smushed up in the sensory hell)And repeated exposure in order to acclimate the person, is the only solution if you aren't going to lock them in their house forever!
We are currently on my daughter's birthday trip to WDW. She is turning 7. In the past (2 or 3 times a year for a few years now) we have been fine with the DAS. The kiddo has a wheelchair, but also autism, and pretty severe epilepsy and cognitive disability. She is on a lot of meds and isn't always alert. We only go to the park for a few hours at a time then we have to go. The fastpass lines are crazy long. Like, 30 minutes or more. So we get a return time for the wait minus 10, then the fastpass line is another 30. Then the wheelchair is often further delayed. Long story short, she hasn't made it through a single line at MK during regular hours (the party was better). We have to abandon the line after 10 or 15 minutes as the noise and crowd becomes too much, and get another return time. We went to guest relations and they said, so sorry, come at a slower time of the year. The website says they are willing to make accommodations in special cases but no one we have found will do so. I asked if I could wait in line and bring her in at the end, they said no. Does anyone have any ideas? We did not do a single ride or character today. Thanks in advance.
Oh I know. But unless you *are* Bubble Boy, it is a disservice to expect that everyone cater to your special needs so that you can remain in your "bubble".Training a person to cope with something horrible is not the same as making it not BE horrible.
It is definitely stressful, but it is not the same as a WDW queue. In sensory terms.Oh I know. But unless you *are* Bubble Boy, it is a disservice to expect that everyone cater to your special needs so that you can remain in your "bubble".![]()
And what do you mean, there is nothing like WDW-level stress elsewhere? driving on a crowded freeway with merges, lane changes, people not signaling/cutting others off, etc., doesn't count as similar to a WDW queue? Haha if only I could get in the FP+ lane on the highway!!!
We also qualified for the DLP version of the DAS, for which you do have to provide government provided proof of entitlement, which is not legal in USA. It also works differently. I wonder whether having different accommodations based on need would serve WDW better. NOT the need to provide proof, but the need to specify type of accommodation required, so that assistance could better fit the need.Unfortunately more and more people are qualifying for the DAS. Just read through this thread and you can see why people feel they should qualify.
Disney is dammed if they do dammed if they don’t give a DAS. Imagine the bad press if someone writes a review about their disability not being a DAS. As the parks get more and more crowded more people are requesting the DAS and this makes the lines longer
No. The ADA requires that access be provided, NOT the client's preferred method of access.We also qualified for the DLP version of the DAS, for which you do have to provide government provided proof of entitlement, which is not legal in USA. It also works differently. I wonder whether having different accommodations based on need would serve WDW better. NOT the need to provide proof, but the need to specify type of accommodation required, so that assistance could better fit the need.
Where in that did you get the clients preference from? In DLP, the disability accommodation is given based on disability (what you explain, corroborated by the proof you have to provide) they issue a card with a code and colour designating which type of assistance you are entitled to. This card, by the way, also tells you which attractions your disability will render impossible, and which you will be turned away from. There is no preferring involved. Although I will say, that, what this client would prefer (and I assume what MANY others would *prefer*) is that their child can access and enjoy holidays, without the extreme compromises and additional pain they have to deal with. NO DAS is providing that, so the idea of client preference is laughable.No. The ADA requires that access be provided, NOT the client's preferred method of access.
We also qualified for the DLP version of the DAS, for which you do have to provide government provided proof of entitlement, which is not legal in USA. It also works differently. I wonder whether having different accommodations based on need would serve WDW better. NOT the need to provide proof, but the need to specify type of accommodation required, so that assistance could better fit the need.
In DLP, the disability accommodation is given based on disability (what you explain, corroborated by the proof you have to provide) they issue a card with a code and colour designating which type of assistance you are entitled to.
I guess I'm not sure why I felt compelled to write this, but I sometimes get frustrated if conversations turn into "well what do you expect them to do" as if we want to be treated special. That's not the case, what we're asking for is some way that we can feel a little normal and that probably means treating our disabled kid different. Every day is a challenge, and if WDW can feel like less of a challenge, we all benefit not just the disabled kid.