ladyjubilee
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2012
- Messages
- 249
There 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).
I'm going to try not to be snarky and see this as a teaching moment, cause even Disney offered this little nugget in their defense... You got to the Park so you must be able to wait.
I feel this suggestion comes from lack of contact with persons severely impacted by autism. Yes, our families do have to wait. We wait at the doctor's office....bring all kinds of fidgets, videos, headphones and for my family at least STILL end up with Security being called. Yes, we ride in a car.... but you may not be aware of how often the seat is kicked, things are thrown, hair is pulled, eyes scratched, one of us is bitten. You probably haven't had your ears bleed after a full screaming meltdown...or walk around on a daily basis with claw and bite marks. My guess is your child has never knocked you out or sent school staff to the hospital.
Oh and at least for me, the very thought of flying would be a nightmare. Yet my kid LOVES WDW. He doesn't say "mama" but can say "Disney". We even joke that I need to get a job at Disney so we can go all the time.
My point, though, is that this suggestion that "hey, you wait all the time" so you can wait here, is really just not helpful as it lack full understanding of what waiting in the real world involves. It's kind of like telling a Diabetic bodies produce insulin, so you don't really need that injection.