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General Parenting
Sharing diagnosis with ghg
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<blockquote data-quote="keista" data-source="post: 473655" data-attributes="member: 11965"><p>Only if you do not understand the disability or your child. I find absolutely nothing ambiguos about my son's inability to socialize "normally" and his resulting refusal to do work in groups in the classroom. There is nothing ambiguous about DD1's inability to tolerate noisy situations or her resulting, sometimes maladaptive, behavior to get away from such situations. Absolutely nothing ambiguous about DD2's friend (ADHD) calling our house repeatedly after she was told DD1 was busy and would call back in 1/2 an hour.</p><p></p><p>Once you have the <strong>correct</strong> diagnosis and understand how it impacts a particular child, there is very little ambiguity. I will concede that some ambiguity/confusion/"don't know how to deal with this behavior" can pop up, but that's normal even with PCs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keista, post: 473655, member: 11965"] Only if you do not understand the disability or your child. I find absolutely nothing ambiguos about my son's inability to socialize "normally" and his resulting refusal to do work in groups in the classroom. There is nothing ambiguous about DD1's inability to tolerate noisy situations or her resulting, sometimes maladaptive, behavior to get away from such situations. Absolutely nothing ambiguous about DD2's friend (ADHD) calling our house repeatedly after she was told DD1 was busy and would call back in 1/2 an hour. Once you have the [B]correct[/B] diagnosis and understand how it impacts a particular child, there is very little ambiguity. I will concede that some ambiguity/confusion/"don't know how to deal with this behavior" can pop up, but that's normal even with PCs. [/QUOTE]
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