nydisneygirl1975
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2011
- Messages
- 32
My husband has anxiety and experiences panic attacks. Would he have to get a drs note for him to get a GAC?
I have an anxiety and panic disorder as well and I wonder if your concern is that should a panic attack hit and you have to leave a line perhaps there is a way you might return to the line instead of starting at the end?
At least, this was my worry prior to my first time. It seems like that is exactly the kind of request a GAC card might be good for and discuss this with guest relations. Thankfully I manage my panic attacks quite well with klonopin and liquor, but I am sympathetic to your husbands condition.
For over a year now I have had no problem getting a GAC for my anxiety. I typically walk up, say I need a GAC, and that I have an anxiety disorder. I am a local so I have done this several dozen times and never had a problem up until this past Monday.
The guy at guest services looked at me and simply said "Anxiety is not a disability". I then requested to speak with someone else. The woman proceeded to tell me they are changing their policies to those with a physical disability are the only ones able to get a GAC, and physical meaning you cannot do stairs or have trouble with changing surfaces. I explained that this is not an issue with wait time, but an issue with the amount of people around me in the small que lines. She then said, since we had five in out party, for me to put two people in front of me and two behind me and have them leave space for me to have my own bubble. At this point I was shaking, and my anxiety was about to boil over. In the end she gave me the GAC but told me very soon I will not be able to get one.
I was flabbergasted at how insensitive they were to the situation and how flat out rude they were.
The comment about "physical" disabilities irritated me also. So are children with autism no longer going to get a GAC? Are other highly functioning people with mental disabilities going to be required to wait in the long lines? People with heart conditions also would no longer be eligible for a GAC.
The comment about "physical" disabilities irritated me also. So are children with autism no longer going to get a GAC? Are other highly functioning people with mental disabilities going to be required to wait in the long lines? People with heart conditions also would no longer be eligible for a GAC.
I thought a GAC isn't intended to shorten waits.
I think a heart condition is a physical disability.
Anyway I have been in regular contact with someone in guest experiences about the GAC changes and people with autism are being considered as a group, and as a separate entity than those with physical disabilities. The person I have been speaking with didn't have specifics, or just wouldn't tell me until they are official, but they are putting extra effort and consideration into their plan for families dealing with autism.
I'm curious to see what the changes are. We are going in Oct and Dec and are going to focus on a touring plan, FP+ and FP- with our son hoping to get away from a need for a GAC not knowing how it will work in the future.
I was told that the new guidelines will be announced at the beginning of October.
Disney cannot offer 'people with autism' extra consideration (if that means services not offered to the public) without violating part of sec 12182 of the ADA. So I'm not sure what they have planned, but it can't be a special service. It just has to offer an opportunity of equal access.
. The woman proceeded to tell me they are changing their policies to those with a physical disability are the only ones able to get a GAC, and physical meaning you cannot do stairs or have trouble with changing surfaces. .
For over a year now I have had no problem getting a GAC for my anxiety. I typically walk up, say I need a GAC, and that I have an anxiety disorder. I am a local so I have done this several dozen times and never had a problem up until this past Monday. ...
There is going to have to be more to it. That won't stop teenagers who rent wheelchairs and fake it, or those who are legitimately disabled renting out themselves and use of their GAC
For over a year now I have had no problem getting a GAC for my anxiety. I typically walk up, say I need a GAC, and that I have an anxiety disorder. I am a local so I have done this several dozen times and never had a problem up until this past Monday.
The guy at guest services looked at me and simply said "Anxiety is not a disability". I then requested to speak with someone else. The woman proceeded to tell me they are changing their policies to those with a physical disability are the only ones able to get a GAC, and physical meaning you cannot do stairs or have trouble with changing surfaces. I explained that this is not an issue with wait time, but an issue with the amount of people around me in the small que lines. She then said, since we had five in out party, for me to put two people in front of me and two behind me and have them leave space for me to have my own bubble. At this point I was shaking, and my anxiety was about to boil over. In the end she gave me the GAC but told me very soon I will not be able to get one.
I was flabbergasted at how insensitive they were to the situation and how flat out rude they were.
The comment about "physical" disabilities irritated me also. So are children with autism no longer going to get a GAC? Are other highly functioning people with mental disabilities going to be required to wait in the long lines? People with heart conditions also would no longer be eligible for a GAC.
Obviously I don't know the tone she said this with but it seems like she was trying to make a legitimate suggestion for you. We have the exact same plan for my son. If people get to close to him he hits, and when I say he "hits" I mean he wallops people with all the force he can muster with a smile on his face. He has pain indifference and just doesn't know it hurts. He likes the feeling of touching things with force.
So for us, "making a bubble" would be a good suggestion. It's the only way one can reasonably keep an impending crowd away from the person with the need. Obviously there are other things to help in addition, maybe ride quieter rides, go at low crowd days, use the GAC for alternative waiting, have a good touring plan. For us it includes his deep pressure vest and wrist restraints for the times we can't catch a flying fist.
I would suggest getting him a wheelchair with restraints, or a stroller as a wheelchair? That way you can avoid the many opportunities that would come up for him to assault people. I've worked with students that have that same issue, so I feel for you - it's so hard to balance letting the child be free and keeping those around you safe. We had to go through special restraint training (beyond standard school restraint training) so we could keep everyone safe. I work in a high school, so I was dealing with 14-22 year olds. When they get that much bigger and stronger, it gets so dangerous. I got punched, and had to fill out incident reports at the police station for the assaults.