Imzadi
♥ Saved by an angel in a trench coat!
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2004
- Messages
- 40,767
I am right there with you, and I have two kids with special needs. Neither of whom were allowed to act out in public, scream or throw things at the table, or in any way impinge on another patron's good time. If that means we get up and leave, then we get up and leave. Just because my boys have difficulty sitting still doesn't mean I have the right to let them run wild "because they're disabled, ya know." NO!
We started teaching our kids from an early age how to act at the table, in the store, at church, at Chuck E.Cheese, etc. Even Christian is expected to behave himself at the table. Especially Christian! Because it takes him so long to learn, so many repetitions of the *right* behavior for him to get it, we had to start from the age of 2. When he'd try to throw a cup or flip his plate, we pounced right on that. What might elicit an "awwww, ain't that cute" at age 2 will NOT be so cute at 22.
The same goes for non-disabled kids, too. IT's much easier to train kids when they're small. If parents don't do their job, then you have kids who don't have the grounding they need and they become attention-seeking, petulant tyrants.
Thank YOU! A child's brain isn't even fully formed at age 5 or age 8. To act like a child, especially a special needs child can't be taught or changed is setting them on a long, bad path. What's that saying, "Prepare the child for the path, not the path for the child"?

Sorry it just struck me as funny. Not only does she have to wait for bratty little bro to fake blowout birthday candles...all she gets is fruit.




My DH puts them together for our family and freinds to see what we are up to--so he gets ALL the credit.