AnnaNonamus
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jan 2, 2012
- Messages
- 154
I will admit it now. I expected Disney to be a breeze with my autistic daughter Ok. Maybe not a breeze, but I was expecting much easier than I have gotten. Last year, I went down with my best friend to help with her two kids, one of which is also Autistic, and has many mannerisms that are much worse than my daughter has- much more inflexible, much more touchy. We got through Disney with very little issues.
We arrived today, and only spent about 3 hours at Downtown Disney (90 minutes of which were spent at Planet Hollywood eating) before leaving for the Gulf Coast until Sunday. We don't "officially" arrive until Sunday afternoon.
My daughter has somewhat mild autism. She is generally pretty easy going. She has some issues with crowds and noise, but I can usually redirect her, and keep her focused.
Today was an exercise in futility. I saw a side of Gillian I have not seen in several years. Here are all the things she was doing-
-hyper focused on 1 thing, and got extremely repetitive about it (in this case, she wanted to swim, and normally, she will stop asking when I tell her that we are done with the topic until it's time to address it- in this case, later that afternoon). She was asking every other minute- not an exaggeration.
- scared of getting lost in the crowds
- holding my hand a lot- at 11, this is something she rarely does at all anymore.
- required physical redirection to follow the others in the group - my FIL in the lead, then my older daughter, then Gillian, followed by me (to ensure she stayed withthe group). More than a few times, I had to gently direct her by turning her shoulders.
- sitting on the ground in the middle of walkways, stores, etc.
- being very loud and repetitive, even when redirected or being asked to stop (which usually does the trick- she normally responds very well to verbal and visual cues for social behavior)
- getting lost in the crowd by slipping in between people that I could not get past- she usually needs a single reminder, maybe 2 on an outing that she needs to ask to go around, or wait until the path is clear. She was just charging forward without pause, despite lots of reminders and verbal cues.
- getting scared when she and I lost track of my 17yo and my FIL- she's at down in the middle of the store and was about to start crying.
- not understanding or grasping basic directions, or answers to her questions. She has a very logical mind, so when she asked me why we couldn't go to the parks just to look at the rides, my answer of not having a ticket for today just left her with a blank look.
I have always been pretty good with redirection, verbal and physical cues (she usually responds to a snapping sound, or if a visual cue is needed for her attention, she responds to me putting a finger in her eye site and drawing the finger back to my nose). She almost never melts down- she was way past that today. She was shutting down in a big way.
Walking through the Lego store, she just stopped hearing anyone around her, and from there on out, to get her attention, I had to put my hands gently on her shoulders, lean in, and talk directly next to her ear.
I should mention, she has rarely ever been schedule based- she could handle small change with no issue. If we normally go to school at 8, but it has a delay, she thinks nothing of it.
Now, I am dreading the parks. We arrive Sunday. My FIL is not going with us, but my aunt is flying in to meet us and will be there the entire time. However, she has almost no experience working with Gillian when she is like this.
I do have a list of quite spots in each park, and tips for different shows and what not, but I have a feeling she and I will be spending much more time outside of the parks than in them.
She is so very excited, too. For 6 months, the only word to come out of her mouth is Disney. Even today after we left DTD, it was pretty single minded towards "We're going to Disney!"
-sigh- any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I have had a loose schedule in mind for each day - park 1 in the morning, resort from 1-3/4pm for pool time, then park 2 in the evenings. We have no parks Tuesday until MNSSHP, and no parks at all Thursday, both as down time for her (and my feet and back!). I am planning to make it more of a set schedule, and letting her know each day exactly what park we will be going to.
We arrived today, and only spent about 3 hours at Downtown Disney (90 minutes of which were spent at Planet Hollywood eating) before leaving for the Gulf Coast until Sunday. We don't "officially" arrive until Sunday afternoon.
My daughter has somewhat mild autism. She is generally pretty easy going. She has some issues with crowds and noise, but I can usually redirect her, and keep her focused.
Today was an exercise in futility. I saw a side of Gillian I have not seen in several years. Here are all the things she was doing-
-hyper focused on 1 thing, and got extremely repetitive about it (in this case, she wanted to swim, and normally, she will stop asking when I tell her that we are done with the topic until it's time to address it- in this case, later that afternoon). She was asking every other minute- not an exaggeration.
- scared of getting lost in the crowds
- holding my hand a lot- at 11, this is something she rarely does at all anymore.
- required physical redirection to follow the others in the group - my FIL in the lead, then my older daughter, then Gillian, followed by me (to ensure she stayed withthe group). More than a few times, I had to gently direct her by turning her shoulders.
- sitting on the ground in the middle of walkways, stores, etc.
- being very loud and repetitive, even when redirected or being asked to stop (which usually does the trick- she normally responds very well to verbal and visual cues for social behavior)
- getting lost in the crowd by slipping in between people that I could not get past- she usually needs a single reminder, maybe 2 on an outing that she needs to ask to go around, or wait until the path is clear. She was just charging forward without pause, despite lots of reminders and verbal cues.
- getting scared when she and I lost track of my 17yo and my FIL- she's at down in the middle of the store and was about to start crying.
- not understanding or grasping basic directions, or answers to her questions. She has a very logical mind, so when she asked me why we couldn't go to the parks just to look at the rides, my answer of not having a ticket for today just left her with a blank look.
I have always been pretty good with redirection, verbal and physical cues (she usually responds to a snapping sound, or if a visual cue is needed for her attention, she responds to me putting a finger in her eye site and drawing the finger back to my nose). She almost never melts down- she was way past that today. She was shutting down in a big way.

Walking through the Lego store, she just stopped hearing anyone around her, and from there on out, to get her attention, I had to put my hands gently on her shoulders, lean in, and talk directly next to her ear.
I should mention, she has rarely ever been schedule based- she could handle small change with no issue. If we normally go to school at 8, but it has a delay, she thinks nothing of it.
Now, I am dreading the parks. We arrive Sunday. My FIL is not going with us, but my aunt is flying in to meet us and will be there the entire time. However, she has almost no experience working with Gillian when she is like this.
I do have a list of quite spots in each park, and tips for different shows and what not, but I have a feeling she and I will be spending much more time outside of the parks than in them.
She is so very excited, too. For 6 months, the only word to come out of her mouth is Disney. Even today after we left DTD, it was pretty single minded towards "We're going to Disney!"
-sigh- any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. I have had a loose schedule in mind for each day - park 1 in the morning, resort from 1-3/4pm for pool time, then park 2 in the evenings. We have no parks Tuesday until MNSSHP, and no parks at all Thursday, both as down time for her (and my feet and back!). I am planning to make it more of a set schedule, and letting her know each day exactly what park we will be going to.