binkyboots
Evil Pastry
- Joined
- Sep 12, 2005
- Messages
- 286
phew...
I've read the disABILITIES threads for a good portion of the evening, trying to glean the information I'm hunting out for our trip... but there's nothing like getting the specifics (planning for our holidays require details, lol)
My husband has cp (physically it's mild, muscle spasms, but he has a learning disability, very little idea of when a comment is innapropriate, no sense of time or danger), epilepsy, chronic pain and leg ulcers and a history of vascular problems (dvt)
we're planning a trip to wdw in October (I want him to be at the park on his birthday!) and I'm starting my "notebook of doom" now, I try to get down information on toilets, possible "cool down" zones and so on. he'll be using a wheelchair, manual and brought from home.
so, here goes the questions...
heat, overstimulation, crowded situations can trigger his seizures, at home we deal with it by staying away from large crowds, staying in when it's hot. but this is his holiday.
Do you think it would be appropriate to ask for a gac? if lines are short and cool we're more than happy to wait with everbody else, he likes people, will start up chatting with people, but I know that there's a sort of critical point where it becomes too much, too long and too stimulating for him to deal with, results in him seizing and then sleeping it off for an hour or two.
Also, are there any facilities at the first aid stations where he might be allowed to cool off if he starts feeling fitty (sometimes he gets a warning, tastes and visual disturbances, if we're quick we can sometimes avoid the seizure altogether)
otherwise... I guess I'm just nervous, I'm hoping he enjoys himself. In a lot of ways he's very innocent, he loves disney and cant wait to meet his favorite characters. oh, that's a question, any disabled adults (particularly those with learning disabilities) here (or carers of disabled adults) do the cast members interact with you? give you a little extra time, sometimes he just gets so wowed by an experience it takes him a minute to get his head round it.
I've read the disABILITIES threads for a good portion of the evening, trying to glean the information I'm hunting out for our trip... but there's nothing like getting the specifics (planning for our holidays require details, lol)
My husband has cp (physically it's mild, muscle spasms, but he has a learning disability, very little idea of when a comment is innapropriate, no sense of time or danger), epilepsy, chronic pain and leg ulcers and a history of vascular problems (dvt)
we're planning a trip to wdw in October (I want him to be at the park on his birthday!) and I'm starting my "notebook of doom" now, I try to get down information on toilets, possible "cool down" zones and so on. he'll be using a wheelchair, manual and brought from home.
so, here goes the questions...
heat, overstimulation, crowded situations can trigger his seizures, at home we deal with it by staying away from large crowds, staying in when it's hot. but this is his holiday.
Do you think it would be appropriate to ask for a gac? if lines are short and cool we're more than happy to wait with everbody else, he likes people, will start up chatting with people, but I know that there's a sort of critical point where it becomes too much, too long and too stimulating for him to deal with, results in him seizing and then sleeping it off for an hour or two.
Also, are there any facilities at the first aid stations where he might be allowed to cool off if he starts feeling fitty (sometimes he gets a warning, tastes and visual disturbances, if we're quick we can sometimes avoid the seizure altogether)
otherwise... I guess I'm just nervous, I'm hoping he enjoys himself. In a lot of ways he's very innocent, he loves disney and cant wait to meet his favorite characters. oh, that's a question, any disabled adults (particularly those with learning disabilities) here (or carers of disabled adults) do the cast members interact with you? give you a little extra time, sometimes he just gets so wowed by an experience it takes him a minute to get his head round it.