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call me jaded

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Posts posted by call me jaded


  1. First of all they weren't traffic cops

    The amount of paperwork they would need to complete is horrendous

    The incident would not help them meet any of their targets

    They were going off shift and no longer get overtime

    They've just received their notices that they are at risk of redundancy

    They should have been off shift hours ago

    and/or were generally fed up


  2. I cant believe where this thread has gone.

     

    I tried to split it into two but don't seem to have the right permissions. Apologies for that peaches. Will try again.

     

     

     

    ETA: All done, off topic posts have been moved here - think this thread reads ok. Let me know if I've missed anything.


  3. What's he like in school and are they experiencing the same difficulties? If so then it sounds like time to call an early review of the statement as some kind of residential care (wwekly boarding/college placement) might be needed.

     

    It's really down to social care and I am cynical enough to think that if you don't present a risk to the safety and well-being of the child then there will be nothing in the budget.

     

    Have you involved a local councillor? Usually opposition councillors are good for holding the local authority to account on yur behalf.


  4. They might try to sell you a signal booster. You can politely decline. Because you asked before you bought, the sale was conditional on the product working as assured. This is technically a verbal contract and it does not need to be written down in any way. They should refund you without any quibbles.

     

    If it's any consolation I never took anything back until I was about 25 - charity shops did really well out of me!


  5. Karen I nearly looked up Conduct Disorder before I posted that. Now that I have I find that aggression is one of the four criteria plus destruction of property, deceitfulness or theft, and serious violation of rules. Three out of the four criteria need to be met. The kind of aggression goes beyond the kind of lashing out associated with ADHD and autism, it's more or less criminal behaviour:

    (1) often bullies, threatens, or intimidates others

    (2) often initiates physical fights

    (3) has used a weapon that can cause serious physical harm to others (e.g., abat, brick, broken bottle, knife, gun)

    (4) has been physically cruel to people

    (5) has been physically cruel to animals

    (6) has stolen while confronting a victim (e.g., mugging, purse snatching, extortion, armed robbery)

    (7) has forced someone into sexual activity

     

    More here.

     

    BTW for copyright purposes you can normally post links to websites, it's wholesale copy and pastes that are problematic, especially if the original source is not credited.


  6. Peaches I'm not aware of aggression being part of any diagnostic criteria. An SLT put it to me many years ago that physical outbursts were an expression of frustration at not being understood, so an effect of communication impairment rather than the cause of it. Or in the case of ADHD an effect of impulsivity rather than the cause.


  7. If anybody is uncertain about whether a post is within the forum Guidelines and Rules there is always the Report button at the bottom left of each post. Moderators have a lot of posts to read and sometimes skim through threads, so using the report button would give us a helping hand.


  8. Just for fun! Sparked by a distinctly 'active but odd' incident...

     

    Yesterday my 16 year old non-verbal DS came in off his transport from school and took great exception to the shirt I was wearing (a pink cotton formal shirt - I'd ironed it and everything!). He immediately chased me down the hall grabbing the buttons to get me to take it off. I had to stand in the kitchen with him pulling at the shirt whilst I undid the buttons. At first I thought he was just having a grump as he came in from school but he was absolutely determined that the shirt had to come off. He let me put on a t-shirt no problem.

     

    Later in the evening my DD1's friend came over and we were telling him about the event - 'just as well you didn't get here earlier' kind of thing. DS then went to pick up the shirt which I'd left on a stool and took it over to the laundry basket and put it in. So funny - DS was laughing as he did. As we all burst out laughing he went back, took it out of the basket and put it in the bin. Talk about functional communication! I think it was the buttons he was objecting to.

     

    We then spent a good half hour talking about all the funny things he'd done with clothing - he takes his shoes off at the drop of a hat in the most inappropriate places - walked through the airport in his bare feet, throws shoes in the bin, over fences, out of the car, was permanently naked at home when he was young, will only wear track suit bottoms and only then with a certain feel about them. All these things that are so bizarre that you would never think were part of autism if you weren't living with it every day but are really so much a part of our lives.

     

    Anyone else?


  9. ... and you can get lottery tickets for £1! :lol: Sorry, I'm sure that would be a great idea but I just don't have that money to spend. I'm going to struggle with the basics this year, let alone any luxuries :(

     

    You seemed rather desperate! And were going out to buy. Any friends or family got one lurking in the back of a cupboard?


  10. I would go for a freeview recorder if you can stretch to it. There's some on amazon for under £100. Or if you buy a flatscreen TV you can get DVD player and freeview built in for under £200. Tesco have £500 of extra clubcard points on Tesco Direct right now - bought a new tumble dryer today. We have a TD counter in store.


  11. talking of the 80s, did anyone see Alan Davies Teenage Rebel last night? What angst. Loved the girl friend who said she entered college a lower middle class girl and came out a radical militant feminist lesbian, can't remember the exact label, but something she was clearly not. Now that's peer pressure for you. I was a yuppie, but often mistaken for a Sloane, lol

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