Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Jane wrote: > In other cases (and again, I am speaking generally, NOT > about your husband, Louis), I suspect some adult children > have formed their own picture of what " unconditional love " > from a parent should look/feel like, and that mental > construct prevents the adult child from seeing that the > parent, although not living up to that mental image in > the adult child's mind, is living out the parent's own > version of " unconditional love. " That's a good point. A lot of misunderstandings and hard feelings are caused by people using different working definitions for the same words. We may think we know what something means, but we really only know what it means to US. Clay Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 > > > In other cases (and again, I am speaking generally, NOT > > about your husband, Louis), I suspect some adult children > > have formed their own picture of what " unconditional love " > > from a parent should look/feel like, and that mental > > construct prevents the adult child from seeing that the > > parent, although not living up to that mental image in > > the adult child's mind, is living out the parent's own > > version of " unconditional love. " > > That's a good point. A lot of misunderstandings and > hard feelings are caused by people using different > working definitions for the same words. We may think > we know what something means, but we really only know > what it means to US. > > Clay ************ Nods head in agreement to Clay, and Jane, your post was well writen and worth going back to. Im also having trouble accepting my fathers love, he puts me down and laughs at me to an extent where it seems normal, but i know he loves me anyway, he just has his own problems. Hearing your description is nice because its like two heads are better than one.. Gareth. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 My father's just a pussywhipped wimp of a man. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Camille wrote: >I'd just die if my son became a white suprematist or >went into the army. > Going into the army won't be a matter of choice for much longer, I fear. Nobody in Washington is talking about it much, but they are going to bring back the draft. They have already started looking for people to staff the draft boards. The draft will probably start up right after the elections unless we can pull off a miracle in November. Until now, Bush has relied on the terrible job market to push people into the military, but they aren't getting enough recruits even to handle the occupation of Iraq, let alone all the other countries he wants to invade and occupy. Stop the Crusade Ride the Music AndyTiedye Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Hi, Thank you for sharing that information, I don't follow politics very closely at all, since I think politicians are liars nearly always. I hope that my son would take the stand that some of his relatives took at the end of World War II, which is to ask for a conscientious objector status, and if denied go to federal pen for refusing to go to war. Two of his dad's uncles did that, they should have been given conscientious objector status, but they went to prison instead, for about a year and a half, I think, in Washington State. Killing is wrong. Killing because a government tells you to kill is really stupid, they lie through their teeth all the time. Camille > > >I'd just die if my son became a white suprematist or > >went into the army. > > > Going into the army won't be a matter of choice for much > longer, I fear. Nobody in Washington is talking about it > much, but they are going to bring back the draft. They > have already started looking for people to staff the draft boards. > The draft will probably start up right after the elections > unless we can pull off a miracle in November. > > Until now, Bush has relied on the terrible job market to push > people into the military, but they aren't getting enough recruits > even to handle the occupation of Iraq, let alone all the other > countries he wants to invade and occupy. > > > Stop the Crusade > > > > Ride the Music > > AndyTiedye Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 This message from gareth arched across the cosmos: >Ok; *Why did you go out with this guy!!!!!!!!!!* ? To be honest, I thought he was an extremely good guy... I only wanted a totally non-violent, gentle fellow. C seemed just like that, he was very deliberate-moving, not very social, had never hit anybody or yelled even when being beaten up by his siblings -- very quiet sort of fellow that I thought might be " just like me. " For a time, he seemed to be that way, too. Problems physically cropped up about seven months after we became partners. There were a lot of changes, and whereas before I had just avoided him whenever I was upset, he no longer was letting that happen. He would come to my house (he lived about 2 miles away) or find me elsewhere around town or school (we also attended uni together) and refuse to leave me alone. I had no idea how to handle that, and when I tried asking friends/family for help, they just laughed it off as normal, so I was left alone. Sometimes if I was home they'd let him in, or a mutual friend would engineer it so I'd " have " to spend time with him so he'd stop complaining to her. Eventually I wasn't able to keep from showing how upset I was around him, and that is when the physical stuff started. I'd already been turned away once by family/friends for protesting his behavior, and I only thought " abuse " included striking/hitting/etc so I had no idea it wasn't normal... I knew I was unhappy but thought that it was just because I was broken, not designed for relationships especially as that is what he kept telling me the real problem was. (I still strongly suspect that he might be right in that sense.) >I mean seriously, its probably this thing that most angers me about >women; They go out with men that treat them bad, then complain about >it to people like me who only try to be good to them, but wouldnt >look twice at us in a sexual sense. I've always hated that about most women as well, actually -- I can't get along with them because there are always related thought processes in them that crop up and frustrate me. I couldn't even go to the movies with that kind of woman because they'll swoon over the macho/aggressive men I'd run in fear/revulsion from, and when I point out the nice/kind guys I like, they make fun of me. Even other males seem to think that men with " aggressive " features (muscular structures on the face that only come if one spends most of one's time tense/frowning rather than laughing/smiling) are more appealing, whereas I dislike that and prefer muscular signs of somebody that normally has a friendly/gentle attitude. >so many women just keep >going with the bad guys, which >1) means the bad guys have no reason to stop, indeed, they are >rewarded for their misdeeds in ways that i can only dream of > >2) the women still gets abused. I agree, and both of those have always really angered me. >Maybe im being to logical about all this, one common reason i hear >is " you cant control who you love " but it all seems so dumb to me. I do agree that to some degree you can't, but there's always the choice of whether one has contact with the individual or not; being in love doesn't mean that you *have* to be with the person. If the pair aren't together, from what I've seen, with rare exception they'll forget one another and move on after a while, so basically it comes down to leaving before (or regardless of whether) love sets in. What I can't grasp, in the case of people like that, is why it is that if they have plenty of other friends of their own kind, why they can't cut the one bad person out? In a solitary lonely-type autistic's case, the person might feel that " it's this person or nobody, ever, at all, not even as a friend " but that doesn't make sense for those not lacking in alternatives. DeGraf ~*~ blog http://sonic.net/mustang/moggy " If the abnormal goes on long enough it becomes the normal. " -- Terry Pratchett Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Camille wrote: >Hi, > >Thank you for sharing that information, I don't follow politics very >closely at all, since I think politicians are liars nearly always. > >I hope that my son would take the stand that some of his relatives >took at the end of World War II, which is to ask for a conscientious >objector status, and if denied go to federal pen for refusing to go >to war. Two of his dad's uncles did that, they should have been >given conscientious objector status, but they went to prison instead, >for about a year and a half, I think, in Washington State. > > If he is autistic, it should be possible for him to get a medical exemption, if his condition would materially affect his ability to perform military service (as it certainly would for most of us!). We will all need to watch the process very carefully to ensure that any draft allows exemptions for " invisible " conditions like autism, and not only for obvious physical handicaps. Some autistics may do well in the military, but many more would not. It would be totally daft to send congenitally clumsy autistic persons into combat. We lose too many soldiers to accidents and " friendly fire " as it is. >Killing is wrong. Killing because a government tells you to kill is >really stupid, they lie through their teeth all the time. > > If there *is* such a thing a just war, why do they always have to lie about it? Surely we deserve the truth when the nation is making such a terrible decision, but instead they always feed us a pack of lies to justify it. >Camille > > > > >> >> >> >>>I'd just die if my son became a white suprematist or >>>went into the army. >>> >>> >>> >>Going into the army won't be a matter of choice for much >>longer, I fear. Nobody in Washington is talking about it >>much, but they are going to bring back the draft. They >>have already started looking for people to staff the draft boards. >>The draft will probably start up right after the elections >>unless we can pull off a miracle in November. >> >>Until now, Bush has relied on the terrible job market to push >>people into the military, but they aren't getting enough recruits >>even to handle the occupation of Iraq, let alone all the other >>countries he wants to invade and occupy. >> >> >>Stop the Crusade >> >> >> >>Ride the Music >> >>AndyTiedye >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2004 Report Share Posted January 5, 2004 Hi, There was a Sunday comic about a year ago, can't remember the name of it, where they showed a young man from the Middle ages I think, talking to an older man about going to war. The older man said something like, " If the elders think it's so glorious to die for one's country, then why don't they go out there and fight themselves? " Anyway, my son isn't autistic, he has a tiny bit of something like dyslexia, either that or he had a hatred for school work. He's big and a little overweight and hurt his knees already. But I would want him to refuse to go to war on the grounds of his beliefs not because he wasn't physically fit. There have been autistics in the military and it amazes me. They liked/like the predictability of the situation apparently, although there is enough hypocrisy in the military to make it unpredictable. The AS man who is my boss has a niece who recently blew the whistle on one of the military acadamies here in the US, she had been coerced into sexual acts (or they tried) by superiors and she said that it was an endemic problem. (She was on a well known talk show recently, interviewed on her story about this) So many autistics startle easily and have depth perception problems...but I guess there are plenty who don't. I don't know if I commented on this before, my boss refused to be drafted for the vietnam war although he had 2 older brothers and a younger brother who all went there (the younger brother after his refusal to go). He fought it in court and very nearly went to jail, but didn't. His brothers told him that they are glad he didn't go because the experience was so bad for them. According to my boss, one said, " it's a good thing you didn't go, they would have made you a 2nd Lieutenant and they killed the 2nd Lieutenants " I said, " Who killed the 2nd Lieutenants, the Americans or the enemy? " My boss said, " The American army killed their own officers because the 2nd Lieutenants were educated and didn't want to cooperate with their superiors " My boss is an engineer and a very smart (geeky) gentle man. He said the reason that he didn't go to Vietnam was this, " They told me for 18 years 'thou shalt not kill' and then suddenly they told me it was ok to kill. " He was raised a Catholic (not known for being conscientious objectors), but the illogic of killing just floored him. He told me, " Looking back on it, I can see it was Aspie stubbornness. " I really like him, such a nice guy. Camille > If he is autistic, it should be possible for him to get a medical > exemption, if > his condition would materially affect his ability to perform military > service > (as it certainly would for most of us!). We will all need to watch > the process > very carefully to ensure that any draft allows exemptions for " invisible " > conditions like autism, and not only for obvious physical handicaps. > > Some autistics may do well in the military, but many more would not. > It would be totally daft to send congenitally clumsy autistic persons > into combat. > We lose too many soldiers to accidents and " friendly fire " as it is. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 6, 2004 Report Share Posted January 6, 2004 > He's big > and a little overweight and hurt his knees already. But I would > want him to refuse to go to war on the grounds of his beliefs not > because he wasn't physically fit. The overweight thing was actually what kept my dad out of the war when he was drafted. He was called in, they examined him, and they said he was going. He got very depressed and sat around and ate a lot. He showed up when it was time for him to report again, and the guy basically yelled at him, " Are you trying to EAT your way out of the service? " It turned out he was over some kind of weight limit and they weren't allowed to take him. He had had no idea there *was* a weight limit. His own father had not been drafted because he happened to farm something that was needed by the military, so they have kind of a strange family history of not being picked to go but not deliberately avoiding it either. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 19, 2004 Report Share Posted January 19, 2004 Clay, Everything you said to Anas about approaching parents in a calm manner makes, esp. about dx of a child, no matter the child's age. I too was given the " I'll give you something to cry about. " commentary... I was/am sensitive, or so I am told, worrying/obsessing about overpopulation of cats and people at a young age; that sort of thing. I would get the crying hiccoughs and my father bless him had no tolerance for it whatsover. My mother would turn down the lights and I'd get rocked by her, my huge limbs wrapped around her, me shaking until I tried to stop the crying. she'd say hurry hurry your father'll be home.... He just didn't get it. He'd say What's got into her now? Someone should give her something to cry about...crying like that over nothing. In my day... She did have a tad more understanding, SOMEtimes. I remember my husband, before he became paralyzed of course, and this pains me of course, to recall it, tossing a ball to our middle son and then it got ugly-he decided to ''toughen him up-by pitching it AT him repeatedly. He was crying. He said he'd give him something to cry about, he just needed toughening up. All boys do. One of our bad fights. But that was 7 yrs. ago/ Kim ________________________________________________________________ The best thing to hit the internet in years - Juno SpeedBand! Surf the web up to FIVE TIMES FASTER! Only $14.95/ month - visit www.juno.com to sign up today! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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