I think with his luck, they will grab a few rolls of paper towels to clean the floor, then put the paper towels in the toilet.Wet Dry vacuums are great for that.
I think with his luck, they will grab a few rolls of paper towels to clean the floor, then put the paper towels in the toilet.Wet Dry vacuums are great for that.
Thanks I needed the laugh!I think with his luck, they will grab a few rolls of paper towels to clean the floor, then put the paper towels in the toilet.
Gotta rinse it off first.I think with his luck, they will grab a few rolls of paper towels to clean the floor, then put the paper towels in the toilet.
My second born son I thought had issues too. He had turned 2 and didn't say anything at all. Could walk, run, eat, shit, but no talking.Today’s update:
Mrs Pronstar (MP) and I are severely limiting Stetson’s TV time. He might be a bit “on the spectrum” so we’re working thru some issues with therapists. I’ll get back to that in a moment…
So MP asks MIL to watch Stetson for maybe 20 mins. No problem, he’s in his playground AKA what used to be our dining room, playing just fine by himself.
MP returns, and MIL is watching cartoons with Stetson on her lap.
MP is furious, we all know the rules about Stetson’s TV time and we’ve all talked about it.
MIL’s reply?
“They're Christian cartoons, he should be able to watch those”.
Look, my faith isn’t a secret…but come on now.
About Stetson:
He’s nearly 2 and not talking.
Lots of kids don’t talk until later, we get that.
But we’ve been a little concerned that he’s not hitting some milestones.
So we’ve got some assistance.
He’s doing great and is now moving toward hitting some communications milestones for his age. He continues to impress with each passing day, and we have no doubt he will catch up to his age cohort soon.
Here’s what y’all might find hilarious, if not unsurprising:
Looking at the Autism spectrum checklist, I check most boxes and would likely be diagnosed as a full-blown Autist LMAO
Yeah we’re not buying into the whole spectrum thing too much…but if we can acquire the tools to both communicate better with him, while also helping him to progress, then we figure it can really only help.My second born son I thought had issues too. He had turned 2 and didn't say anything at all. Could walk, run, eat, shit, but no talking.
Then one day shortly after turning 2 he spoke a few words. Then about 2 weeks later he was speaking in full sentences. Hasn't stopped talking since (that was almost 35 years ago).
My youngest was a bit later than many to really say much as well, to the point my wife was already researching therapists and developmental psychologists. I pushed back - I understood he knew how to speak just fine, but he chose not to. Fast forward a bit, and he'll talk your ear off if you let him. He was about four before he was choosing to use speech, versus trying to use gestures and social engineering to get what he wanted. It took a fair amount of "if you won't say what you want, I guess you don't need it badly enough." My stubbornness ultimately won
Took me till I was 55 to figure it out for myself... Then, reading a couple of my grandmothers letters from when my father was a child, I think he was ASD too.Here’s what y’all might find hilarious, if not unsurprising:
Looking at the Autism spectrum checklist, I check most boxes and would likely be diagnosed as a full-blown Autist LMAO
I think it has always been around, but just not often diagnosed, most kids eventually growing to be almost normal, then becoming engineers, mathematicians, physicists, or rocket scientists... Development of language being the key, so I think you are on the right track.
On the plus side, thanks to your in-laws, I have now heard of Sean John.
I've knows some girls like that. Tramp stamp and pretty comfortable.My pajamapants have a tramp stamp
View attachment 367804
…but not gonna lie, they’re pretty comfortable
I have a coat with his name on it.My pajamapants have a tramp stamp
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…but not gonna lie, they’re pretty comfortable