Callista wrote:
They were always autistic--it's just that around the age of two you get hugely increased expectations, and suddenly the child is overwhelmed... cue burnout, cue obvious autism.
Early diagnosis and early screening might help stop this from happening. If we could get to these kids before the regression happens, we could make sure they have autism-friendly environments to grow up in.
That is a thing I actually also was wondering...
What makes spectrum so bad.
It's actually not the physical stuff. It's just the psychological effects that result from it
and merely the way you are treated.
If you are treated like a disabled child you'll go bust most certainly.
And eventually you'll never return from there.
From then on you'd be "treated".
And I am pretty sure that there is more wrong ways of "treatment" than right ones.
Just considering children to be normal will help.
And helping them finding answers.
Children on the spectrum most probably do not belong anywhere where they are "treated" as being disabled.
I know only that I always thought
that if aspies would be respected more they would have much less symptoms and trouble
(including me when I still didn't know I was aspie)
Even as a child already I remember me thinking something like this already
What do you think?