Where to begin? Well, I'm fairly new to posting on these boards but have been stalking them for a bit to plan our upcoming trip to WDW. This thread was out of the norm for what I've seen on these boards but I suppose they probably exist more than I think (I just don't see them). Regarding the OP-As an educator myself, I was a bit surprised when you said you were one, too, due to your flippant attitude that the child just should not be at WDW if he can't handle lines. I guess that may have been my attitude (though I'm not completely sure) before teaching and having my daughter. While my daughter appears to be completely on track developmentally, I gained so much perspective just from her being born. Instead of being frustrated by the random crying kid, I cringe because that's now my kid. Instead of secretly judging parents who seem to lack "control" of their children while I was out, I empathize with them because it's me now. Instead of pretending I have some magic ball for how I will do things as a parent, I realize there is no guide book to being Super Mommy and parenting (particularly a toddler right now) has a steep learning curve. So what's my point? Perspective, people. Instead of automatically assuming the worse of this guy, put yourself in his shoes or completely butt out (which, if you're on vacation and enjoying yourself, the latter might make the most sense). Nothing in life is so clear cut, in my opinion, and assuming you know all of the facts from the snippet of a conversation that you were eavesdropping on is only providing a "single story" instead of the whole picture. Instead of wasting your energy being annoyed (or whatever) with this man and his complaint, spend your energy on enjoying yourself at the happiest place on earth and maybe give the man the benefit of the doubt. Compassion can truly go a long way-especially for someone that has an added disability that they have no control over. And the idea that people with disabilities are not worthy of additional accommodations is privilege at its finest. From an educator's perspective, providing my special needs students with accommodations is not only my legal responsibility but also gives them that extra bit of help to just get on the same playing field as their developmentally normal counterparts. Sorry for the book but I'm just a bit shocked and sad that adults (with children, no less) can't seem to step outside of their own reality to see someone else's perspective.