Janissy wrote:
Oh my. I had a feeling something like these things would happen but I wasn't sure. I am NT and my daughter has autism. Back when she was in kindergarten or 1st grade (don't remember exactly) her doctor wanted me to make her stop stimming. He had the theory that if I could get her to stop, the time taken up by stimming would be redirected into productive activities like exercise (playing on playground equipment instead of stimming there), coloring, making crafts and so on. I had a feeling it wouldn't work like that but couldn't find anything written down to show him. I just had a feeling that something bad would happen if I followed his plan. So I made no attempt to stop her from stimming and just made vague redirects when he brought it up at appointments. He eventually dropped it. Now I feel vindicated in making the right decision because apparently there really would have been bad consequences for her if I'd followed his plan.
Nicely done. I get sick of doctors thinking they're omniscient. If she's wanted to do those things instead, she would have done them.
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