amethyst
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Two of my best friends are going through divorces. My oldest bff, we've been best friends off and on since middle middle, has been painful to watch as her ex works with my hubby and her daughter is a year younger than mine. It's worse as the day after the courts finalized the divorce the a$$ married his pregnant girl friend (though he still claims that he wasn't seeing her while they were married; despite that being his MO).
Well, bff is learning to be truly ebil (I think she learned it from me. In school she envied my confidence, which is mostly bravado; and I envied her social skills, which I've learned as an adult are mostly submission). Her darling ex asked if he could have the kids Saturday, as Sunday's Father's Day. His custody days are Monday and Tuesday and he works on Sunday. Bff said no problem with Saturday night, but they need to come home Sunday morning.
When her daughter asked how come, she wants to fix breakfast for daddy, she answered, "You can still fix breakfast for daddy. But it's father's day not step-mother's day; you can't spend father's day with daddy if he's working."
Knowing the evil ex, he's probably been complaining to anyone who will listen that my friend won't let him have the kids for father's day.
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18-06-2010 23:42
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gatchamarie
Gatchamaniac
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It's a pity these things happen, and even more when the kids are the most prone to be hurt and involved! And, I cannot but be stricken at how much it's easy to fall in this trap, nowadays ... since I left my full-time work, around six and a half years ago, I've learnt that five couples, among my friends, whom I've always seen as going steady, have separated during this time, all of them having kids of various ages! The cause ... it's always the same ... one of the partners, or the other, was too weak to fight temptation!
Amethyst, no wonder your best friend is learning to be ebil! She must have gone through a lot, and she also must be prepared to be more courageous because there still seems a lot to struggle ahead for her, from what I'm reading! She's fortunate to have a friend like you, though! Your support is precious!
Garnet ... I'm sorry to hear your story! But, you transpire strength and knowledge of dealing with life! Keep in mind that a good person is always rewarded! And, your ex seems to be having what he deserves! I'm sure you weren't that bossy as his present wife! Let them know what they've lost! ... the same happened to my ex-boyfriend, who showed me hell! Today, I chuckle when I think with whom he has ended up, and I cannot but think that he was not the one worthy for me! At least, I was fortunate enough to become aware of his true nature before I could have made the mistake of getting married with him (we already had some plans in mind!)!
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19-06-2010 10:12
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Garnet
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Yep, having grown up in the "disabled" community, I've seen so many people that have made, are making, and will make great contributions to their family, friend and others that it is hard to think about a world where they might not have been born because of something they would have had no control over. My bff is a perfect example. She can't see for squat but she graduated from high school at the top of her class, 3.91 GPA, went to Ball State then transferred to Michigan State where she graduated with a 3.75 GPA. She now homeschools and teaches English in a home-school co-op. True, her problems were from a birth defect and not genetic, but it was something that nowdays would have been seen early and a pregnancy derminated. But the emplications are similar.
Okay, I'm going to go write some more on my sidebar story. This puts me in the perfect frame of mind to work on it.
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19-06-2010 16:26
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amethyst
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Or be required to sign a waiver that you understand that you carry that condition and that it could be passed on and that you understand the necessities in raising a child with that condition.
It really would not be much more than what many medical providers do know, but just before conception takes place rather than after. Anti-abortion people would jump on this as a higher percentage of abortions among married couples in the first trimester are do to the medical concerns that come up the the early tests.
Having raised a child with a disability, one that was not known in its full extent until he was in the eighth grade, I can tell that the biggest burden in raising a child with a disability is not the disability but the ignorance in how to properly deal with the disabilty.
However, it has to be up to the couple and they have to have full knowledge of what could happen and learn how to deal with it. We are still learning the repercussion from stepping away from institutionalizing those that are not a "perfect fit" for society. While the integration is a good thing, at least in California is was done with little to no resources for parents and schools on how to support children and adults that less than fifty years ago would have been locked away in asylum. Funny that in those fifty years, we've not come very far.
When I had my tests with my first, I knew that at that time was not prepared financially or mentally to care for a child with severe mental or physical disabilities. Testing came back clear, but fate caught up with me. He was born with a severe emotional disability that the jury is still out whether it is genetic or not (my belief is that it is, but that there is still currently no testing for it). If we had known then, what we know now, I don't know what we would have done, particularly since his diagnosis was practically unheard of then and is still largely unknown and misunderstood.
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19-06-2010 16:36
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Garnet
GatchaFreak
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I don't have to guess.
I remember growing up and hearing people talk. More than once I overheard people say things like, "Why did those two ever have a child," and "People like that shouldn't be allowed to have children".
In my opinion, my parents did a damn good job of raising me. Yes, I went to school at a state-run institution, but I eventually spent most of my evenings and weekends at home; till I was in highschool and had so many extra-carricular(sp) activities that I was in that I couldn't bother going home except on holidays.
Living in a house where my limited vision was the best of the bunch taught me things I never would have learned any other way. Instead of the usual chores kids have, I was the family reader. God, I read things that bored me to tears so that my parents could be informed. Of course, I got to know a lot about how to ballance a checkbook and run a household too. I became very good at matching colors, giving clear directions, how to be a good sighted guide and how to travel on public transportation independantly.
So, I agree that if a person who knows they could pass on something to their kids is willing to take the responsibility and raise that child to achieve his/her full potential, then they should be encouraged to do so. The world needs all the loving, stable parents it can get. Hey, and then there are those I know, both disabled and not, who have chosen to adopt kids with special needs. I truly commend them.
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19-06-2010 17:06
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amethyst
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The second. And the Down's child will flurish to the best of his ability while the autistic boys unfortunately will not.
I swear up and down that if we had the knowledge of Billy's disability early on, about preschool age, we could have handled him much better. At first we thought he was simply gifted, walking and speaking were on target, speach flowed into short sentences shortly after first words (which were a three word phrase); learned alphabet and numbers early. A very visual learner well ahead of his early preschool classmates. He did not show any behavioral issues until about four when he stopped napping and the school insisted on forcing it. Issues with peers started around Kindergarten/first grade.
At that time, from the behaviors we witnessed and known familiy history, we and the doctors looked at ADD/ADHD the behaviors fit and there was a document family history of it.
Between fifth and seventh grade is where the real concerns started. Where his peers were developing emotionally, he was not. Someone pointed us toward Asperger's Syndrome and the school fought us in supporting a diagnosis -- no sense adding more labels to a troubled child, but we went ahead anyway, and it took several visits to his psychiatrist and one trip to the behavioral peditrician to have it confirmed. Since his diagnosis, we've learned that there is also a famility history of Asperger's/High Functioning Autism.
AS/HFA are virtually identical in the DSM. While HFA usually requires some speech delay, AS does not. Both affect Non-verbal, social/emotional communication. As a seventeen year old, Billy does not realize that he is not normal because he would rather watch TV all day and has no friends his age. To him, his classmates are all freaks and geeks that bear no resembalance to him. All of his social understanding comes mostly from TV, despite our best efforts to limit access -- we don't even have cable.
AS/HFA are harder to diagnose early than lower functioning autism as the lack of speech and repetitive behaviors may not be as predominant. Not to mention that anything that effects social/emotional development is truly is not diagnosable until the development stalls as early on the signs can mimick so many others (particularly true with ADD/ADHD and early bi-polar or early BPD).
My SiL (the Keyop fan) is a pychologist with alcoholism, drug addiction, ADD/ADHD, AS/HFA, Bi-Polar, OCD, and other anxiety disorders so rampant in the family can you imagine the conversations around our dinner table?
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19-06-2010 17:09
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