Did you go to school in the 70's?
(media.greatawakening.win)
You're viewing a single comment thread. View all comments, or full comment thread.
Comments (159)
sorted by:
Schools get more funding for disabilities, and even families can get extra money for an autism diagnosis. Some parents will push for the diagnosis just to get the extra paycheck. But a lot of those diagnosed truly have it, and it's just another sign of the times. I think most of the issues on this list come from the garbage the average American ingests on a daily basis. We live in a giant science experiment and have for decades.
Very true. My 12 year old daughter has a diagnosed mild autism. But we do not collect her extra funds/SSDI, as we treat her like my regular 15 year old daughter, and as any other child. She’s gone from not able to read/speak legibly or beyond word salad at years 1-4, to being one of the top students in her 5th grade class with only minor assistance on reading and comprehension. Her Autism only affects her language/comprehension memory of 3-4+ syllable words and meanings, until it locks into her long term memory a few days or so later. She still speaks using more simple verbiage compared to her peers, but she understands most of what’s going into her ears. It’s her internal translation out to mouth she still has trouble with. But God bless her heart, she works hard to improve each week of the year.
God bless you and your daughter. It sounds like she has a wonderful, supportive family. I used to teach in an autism program, so I have nothing but love for kids with this diagnosis. For all that they struggle with, many of them have amazing insight and sensitivity that the average person lacks.
God bless her. That's wonderful that you treat her 'normally' and she's doing well. Did you ever look into Jenny McCarthy's experience with her autistic son? I don't know much about it, but I know she says she was able to 'bring him out of it.' God bless your daughter and your whole family.
I was told my kid (born in the late 90's) was autistic and we needed to teach him sign language. But I didn't believe that's what was causing him to suddenly be so developmentally delayed. I saw too many physical signs rashes allergies that started occuring the same time be stopped talking. Long story but realized it was his vaccines. Stopped vaccinating, treated biomedically for vaccine damage and after a few years got him back. Took until about 6th grade to lose all the symptoms. But they are gone and he's now a college graduate and infosec engineer. Sadly not the same for another boy in our town born on the same day who received vaccines from the same lots at the same Dr office. His parents just accepted it and now he's in his 20's and still non-verbal.
I think this is the case for a lot of kids and that a lot of kids get an autism diagnosis too soon. My nephew was like your son and his speech was significantly delayed. The pediatrician was already scaring my nephew's parents, saying he was probably autistic and needed testing. They waited and kept things as natural as possible, and with time, he started talking and is now a perfectly normal kid. He does well in school and probably talks too much at this point. So many doctors want to jump right to autism, and for many kids, it's just not right. And I agree that vaccines and food are behind a lot of this.
I guess the question is whether autism really is its own thing or if it's always vaccine- and other toxin-induced brain damage. RFK Jr. was saying the other day you're 11x more likely to get autism if you get the Hep B injection on time (1st day of life!) than if you delay or skip entirely (forget which). Then there's Stephanie Seneff documenting a glyphosate & gut health connection to autism. Obviously we're up a creek trying to get legitimate studies done that could implicate either vaccines or major ag chemicals.
It's encouraging hearing kids are recovering from what appears to be autism though--I haven't heard stories like that before.
Life is very hard for parents of autistic children!