playwright
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2006
- Messages
- 114
Hi all - hope everyone is enjoying the weekend.
Not the worst problem in the world, thankfully, but how would you all handle this? I was chatting with a neighbor with whom I was friendly (at the time, lol) while she was waiting for her NT DS to get off the school bus. (the big yellow bus) She commented about how my DS14 and another neighbor's child were going to hs now (their school accepts children with special needs like my DS, but most of the kids there, incl. the neighbor's child, are NT) and riding the "little yellow bus", and how "funny" it is that the neighbor's child was upset at first because it looked like (and my apologies if I am offending anyone here, I hope not) a "retard bus" and she kept laughing. I just said nothing. I just stood there with my mouth open. I thought that she expected me to laugh along with her. I have a sense of humor, but I didn't think this was funny at all. I had told her a year or so ago - maybe she forgot, understandably as she is busy with her own family/work obligations, maybe she remembered, I don't know - that my DS has special needs, used to attend a self-contained class and did indeed ride the little bus, which was exclusively for the kids in self-contained. (It came up because she asked why he didn't attend the neighborhood school like the other kids. She wanted to know if he was "gifted", lol. In retrospect, I don't really think she thought he was gifted, just wanted answers. Several of my other neighbors asked the same question, and I have always answered their questions about DS' disability openly and honestly - and politely, I try anyway - as I can.)Anyway, sorry to go on and on about this, but (and it's not just about my DS but all kids with special needs) I just don't like it when people refer to the little bus as a "retard" bus. It sounds like they are making fun of and putting down children with special needs. What purpose do comments like that serve? Yes, the little buses are usually for the children with disabilities, but some are for nursery schools and private schools with NT kids. I wish I could remember where I first heard this statement, so I could give credit where it's due but - and I'm paraphrasing here -that children with disabilities are first and foremost, children. Growing up, I had a relative and friend with Down's Syndrome, and I played with them like I did with my other friends. They liked sports, for example, just like the NT kids. My Mom and I worked with autistic kids, and we got to know them. I was exposed to all kinds of people, and learned to respect them as people. Am I being too sensitive? I don't know if my neighbor was intentionally being insensitive, but I wondered if she would joke about the "retard bus" if her child had special needs. I watched her DS get off the bus and I thought that she should feel fortunate that her child is well adjusted, healthy and happy and doesn't have special needs. Are some people just rarely or never exposed to kids with special needs so they misunderstand and make fun of them? I feel that my neighbors have it good - they live in these lovely homes, their kids are all NT and go to the highly-rated neighborhood schools. (Yes, they work hard and pay taxes for them, I know.) Am I jealous of families with NT kids? Right or wrong, you bet I am! I love DS - he is a good kid. It's the school district and the doctors that drive me batty. Year after year, I have to constantly fight for my DS to get services from the district - it never ends. Our finances are drained from seeing neurologists, etc. And we have it "good" as opposed to what some families go through, I shouldn't complain. Do the NT families have a clue as to what it's like? I'm sorry that I'm rambling and venting again. We been here 11 years and have no real friends in the neighborhood, although we've tried and tried, extending invitations, etc., over the years. We can't afford to move. We don't really "fit in" and having the only kid who's not NT in the neighborhood is just the icing on the cake, really. I smile and say hello, sometimes they smile back and make small talk, that's as good as it gets. Not what we'd hoped for when we moved here. How do you guys react when some one uses the word "retard" or "slow" or whatever term? When one of the moms (who knows my DS has special needs) says that they don't want inclusion classes because the "slow kids" will slow the others down? Do you get along with your neighbors? Do you volunteer information about your child's disability or only if they ask questions? Thanks for listening, guys.



