I am sorry that you were offended by the waitress. Is it possible she mistook you for a stay at home mom since you were at Disney on a week day? Not excusing her but I doubt she would have meant to offend you. If it helps I looked at all the research on working moms vs stay at homes after my divorce and found out that daycare kids had better social skills. Makes sense if you think about it.

Actually...nope! I didn't mention working, daycare, or anything! She just saw all of our kids and started talking about how much she loved being a mom and how she only got to do it twice so she wanted to do it right, then proceeded to talk about her son's stepmom working and how she didn't agree with it, etc, etc. if nothing else, it was bizarre for someone to go into such a personal topic with us not even saying a word.There's gotta be more to this story...
If the OP doesn't really believe what the server said was true, why should this "memory" stand out as such a big deal? There must of been something in the conversation that the OP was having with the server for the conversation to go in that direction. Servers don't just start blirting out how they are against daycare.
Today I learned my mom is a waitress at Disney World.

If it helps I looked at all the research on working moms vs stay at homes after my divorce and found out that daycare kids had better social skills.
(in my household we've got two incredibly social people whose moms were at home, and one incredibly introverted person who hides metaphorically in her closet after social outings whose mom worked outside the home) (always good to remember that kids whose moms are at home don't automatically just sit at home staring at their at-home parent...)Actually made fun of my eating/chewing issues.
Actually...nope! I didn't mention working, daycare, or anything! She just saw all of our kids and started talking about how much she loved being a mom and how she only got to do it twice so she wanted to do it right, then proceeded to talk about her son's stepmom working and how she didn't agree with it, etc, etc. if nothing else, it was bizarre for someone to go into such a personal topic with us not even saying a word.
OP sorry it happened and I understand your frustration.
My son has autism and when people found out (when he was little) they would insist on telling me the story of how their son didn't talk for a while and they were "so scared" that he had autism, but then he started talking and it all turned out fine. Why was that a good story to tell me? It didn't turn out fine for me, I swear at least 8 people told me the same type of story. Yet they had no idea they were being so mean and inconsiderate to me. Sometimes people are idiots!
When I engage a CM (or anyone for that matter) in conversation, I feel everyone is entitled to his/her own opinions. I don't let others' opinions get to me. I would have let the matter drop as soon as said conversation was over. But that's me...I'm not easily offended, I guess.
Ha!
Might have been better to see it as people wanting to give you hope, to help you not be so scared or worried. That they were trying to give you something to cling to. And perhaps THEY hoped it, too for your son, their friend's/acquaintance's child. There are plenty of kids in this world who do exactly what the people told you about (my brother, for instance, didn't say a word until he was 3 and then he got tired of a certain older sister speaking for him), and if your son had turned out to be one of them those stories would feel differently to you.

I disagree that it's not idiotic for someone to tell a story like that after your child has already been diagnosed with autism. The diagnosis comes from more than just a speech delay. I'm sure it was an uncomfortable situation for them and sometimes it is hard not to fill the space with words.
Instead of saying "i'm so sorry, what can I do for you" it feels better to tell a story showing how you can relate because you ALMOST experienced the same thing but whew you didn't really. To me this is insensitive and more about the story teller's feelings of awkwardness and wishing to relate and level the playing field when there is an awful tragedy than the recipient of the story's feelings.
What if someone started telling a parent pushing their child in a wheelchair about how their child was late walking, but oops it was nothing and they were SO worried that their child might end up with mobility issues? Would that give you hope or would it make you feel like they are insensitive to your feelings? Or how about after your mother dies someone saying "yeah my mother was in the hospital for a few days and it was SO scary but she is home and fine now." Same kind of thing. It does not offer hope to someone to point out they were worried to but it ended up being nothing once your child has already been diagnosed. it is highly insensitive. I wouldn't go as far as to say intentionally mean but definitely tone deaf to the situation.
I disagree that it's not idiotic for someone to tell a story like that after your child has already been diagnosed with autism. The diagnosis comes from more than just a speech delay. I'm sure it was an uncomfortable situation for them and sometimes it is hard not to fill the space with words.
Instead of saying "i'm so sorry, what can I do for you" it feels better to tell a story showing how you can relate because you ALMOST experienced the same thing but whew you didn't really. To me this is insensitive and more about the story teller's feelings of awkwardness and wishing to relate and level the playing field when there is an awful tragedy than the recipient of the story's feelings.
What if someone started telling a parent pushing their child in a wheelchair about how their child was late walking, but oops it was nothing and they were SO worried that their child might end up with mobility issues? Would that give you hope or would it make you feel like they are insensitive to your feelings? Or how about after your mother dies someone saying "yeah my mother was in the hospital for a few days and it was SO scary but she is home and fine now." Same kind of thing. It does not offer hope to someone to point out they were worried to but it ended up being nothing once your child has already been diagnosed. it is highly insensitive. I wouldn't go as far as to say intentionally mean but definitely tone deaf to the situation.

Actually...nope! I didn't mention working, daycare, or anything! She just saw all of our kids and started talking about how much she loved being a mom and how she only got to do it twice so she wanted to do it right, then proceeded to talk about her son's stepmom working and how she didn't agree with it, etc, etc. if nothing else, it was bizarre for someone to go into such a personal topic with us not even saying a word.