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Re: This time of year

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Well,

As a mother of one formerly potentially noisy boy, with those social

tendencies that we all cannot fathom...I still take your side in this issue. I

would feel the same way in your situation. I don't dare say what went through

my mind about what I would like to do to a kid with the audacity to knock like

that and then try the door.

It's pretty violent. I wouldn't do it really, but it still went through my

mind.

It's like they are cutting a wound open and then rubbing salt in it.

I sure hope May gets here quickly and that you can get yourself a nice little

house with lots of quiet. I'd love to have a house.

The thing that makes me go really ballistic is loud music. Makes me crazy.

I have noticed that lots of kids don't get the concept of private property. I

had a

neighbor with a strange kid...could have been on the spectrum, I

suppose...who just walked in our apartment. I scolded him, you can imagine.

About kids knocking though, I'm sure you won't appreciate this, exactly, but

kids in my " church " all understand the need to knock on a door and waiting

until someone answers, and then going away quietly... they get it modelled

for them from infancy.

:-)

I do understand what you said about feeling invaded by *anyone* knocking

unexpectedly, by the way. I think what's worse is that my mom used to walk in

my apartment without knocking. I really got mad at her for that.

Camille

>

> > I'm sorry about the torture by the kids. Sounds hideous. any chance

> > you can move soon?

>

> In late May, my father retires. I will get half of his Social Security

> retirement (my half will be a shade over $800). Under the USDA Rural

> Development program, that will qualify me for a mortgage for a house of

> up to $42,000. Right now, there are two houses in Casa Grande, AZ

> (about 50 miles north of here) that are less than that. I do not expect

> those specific ones to be available then (although I can certainly

> hope), but hopefully others will. I'll definitely be looking to get one

> in that area.

> As soon as the stressor is removed, I

> calm pretty quickly, although the effects of the sensory load don't go

> away quite that quickly. The irony is that my emotional response is a

> lot like that of the children that annoy me so... intense while it

> happens, but pretty ephemeral. I get really upset over minor things,

> but it passes quickly, just as I can get very happy about minor things.

> Flipping through the TV channels and seeing a favorite TV show coming on

> is joyous, in a way that I presume most people would not understand.

I was in the university bookstore today and stopped to look at a huge Mac

monitor. Next to it there were these adorable little clear acrylic speakers.

The

speaker part was shiny metal instead of paper and the whole thing was

amazingly cool looking. I had to touch the moving part of the speaker and feel

the vibration, then I realized that I might damage it ?? So I put my fingers on

the case of the speaker to feel the vibration. I could have done that for a

half

hour. I made myself stop. I almost bought those speakers. Very cool.

Why can't they go home and perseverate on

> something?

That's what I want to know!

To me, extended social contact is a chore, and the last

> thing I want to do when so loaded is to engage in activities that mean I

> have to endure noise.

>

>

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wrote:

>> And I have no choice but to live around these things, because it

>> is illegal for an apartment to discriminate on the basis of

>> family status.

and Clay responded:

>I'm lucky in that, because No kids live here, only seniors 50+

>and the handicapped.

It's not kids who make the most noise where I live, it's the

" young adults " (in their 20s and 30s). There isn't much noise

other than traffic (and sirens) in the colder parts of the

year. When the weather warms, however, the " young adults "

tend to have parties. They either hang around outside their

houses with loud music playing, or they crank up their car

stereos and blast the music at the world while they sit at

the stop light near my bedroom window. Loud laughter and

hollering back and forth to one another tend to peak as the

party breaks up (i.e., in the early hours of the morning,

when I want to be sleeping).

I do have a couple of younger (pre-teen) kids living near me

now for the first time in a decade. Haven't had a chance to

tell whether they're going to be noisy. I mostly can ignore

outside noises until I open my windows.

Jane

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>

> Have you tried modifying " earbud " headphones so they use earplugs,

thus both giving you sound (television, mp3s, whatever) *and* blocking

out the brats?

>

I have used the following very successfully under varying conditions.

I wear earplugs and then put walkman-style open-air headphones over

them. Such a combination serves several purposes: (1) Earplugs muffle

the ambient noise (e.g. traffic, grocery store, etc.), (2) You can add

music to sooth yourself, (3) You can turn down the music when you need

to talk to someone and (4) When you do (3), you are not as badly

overwhelmed by the ambient noise. It works for me pretty good!

Thanks, Jim

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hey frank... a year or so ago, I say a pair of headphones on the Dr Phil

show, that were completey soudn blocking... maybe something like that

with the earbuds inside for music or a book on tape, might be a solution

for when those kids really get you down.

and hey at least your not like me... I have days where I get pissed off

at the racket outside my window, but usually my kid is the loudest lol,

so I can't say a thing, and i can't use earplugs because I need to be

available. (never mind the fact that he doesn't have a volume control

on his speaking voice)

somedays all I can do is crank up john mayer and dance in the LIVing

romm until the kid comes in and tell me to " turn it down mom it's too

loud.. " serves them right the little buggers.....

dani

starfleet7777 wrote:

>

>

>

>>Have you tried modifying " earbud " headphones so they use earplugs,

>>

>>

>thus both giving you sound (television, mp3s, whatever) *and* blocking

>out the brats?

>

>

>I have used the following very successfully under varying conditions.

>I wear earplugs and then put walkman-style open-air headphones over

>them. Such a combination serves several purposes: (1) Earplugs muffle

>the ambient noise (e.g. traffic, grocery store, etc.), (2) You can add

>music to sooth yourself, (3) You can turn down the music when you need

>to talk to someone and (4) When you do (3), you are not as badly

>overwhelmed by the ambient noise. It works for me pretty good!

>

>Thanks, Jim

>

>

>

>

>

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