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Re:Thank You - New Perspective

,thank you so much for bringing another perspective to view. We need to remember that we are all together on this planet. Minga Guerrero DC<< >>I've been hearing a lot of talk about "bombing Afghanistan back to the >>Stone >>Age." Ronn Owens, on KGO Talk Radio today, allowed that this would mean >>killing innocent people, people who had nothing to do with this atrocity, >>but "we're at war, we have to accept collateral damage. What else can we >>do?" Minutes later I heard some TV pundit discussing whether we "have the >>belly >>to do what must be done." And I thought about the issues being raised >>especially hard because I am from Afghanistan, and even though I've lived >>here for 35 years I've never lost track of what's going on there. So I >>want >>to tell anyone who will listen how it all looks from where I'm standing. >> >>I speak as one who hates the Taliban and Osama Bin Laden. >>There is no doubt in my mind that these people were responsible for the >>atrocity in New York. I agree that something must be done about those >>monsters. But the Taliban and Ben Laden are not Afghanistan. They're not >>even the government of Afghanistan. The Taliban are a cult of ignorant >>psychotics who took over Afghanistan in 1997. Bin Laden is a political >>criminal with a plan. >> >>When you think Taliban, think Nazis. When you think Bin Laden, think >>Hitler. >>And when you think "the people of Afghanistan" think "the Jews in the >>concentration camps." It's not only that the Afghan people had nothing to >>do with this atrocity. They were the first victims of the perpetrators. >>They would exult if someone would come in there, take out the Taliban and >>clear out the rats nest of international thugs holed up in their country. >> >>Some say, why don't the Afghans rise up and overthrow the Taliban? The >>answer is, they're starved, exhausted, hurt, incapacitated, suffering. >>A few years ago, the United Nations estimated that there are 500,000 >>disabled orphans in Afghanistan -- a country with no economy, no food. >>There >>are millions of widows. And the Taliban has been burying these widows >>alive >>in mass graves. The soil is littered with land mines, the farms were all >>destroyed by the Soviets. These are a few of the reasons why the Afghan >>people have not overthrown the Taliban. >> >>We come now to the question of bombing Afghanistan back to the Stone Age. >>Trouble is, that's been done. The Soviets took care of it already. Make >>the >>Afghans suffer? They're already suffering. Level their houses? Done. Turn >>their schools into piles of rubble? Done. Eradicate their hospitals? Done. >>Destroy their infrastructure? Cut them off from medicine and health care? >>Too late. Someone already did all that. New bombs would only stir the >>rubble of earlier bombs. Would they at least get the Taliban? Not likely. >> >>In today's Afghanistan, only the Taliban eat, only they have the means to >>move around. They'd slip away and hide. Maybe the bombs would get some of >>those disabled orphans, they don't move too fast, they don't even have >>wheelchairs. But flying over Kabul and dropping bombs wouldn't really be a >>strike against the criminals who did this horrific thing. Actually it >>would >>only be making common cause with the Taliban -- by raping once again the >>people they've been raping all this time. >> >>So what else is there? What can be done, then? >>Let me now speak with true fear and trembling. The only way to get Bin >>Laden >>is to go in there with ground troops. When people speak of "having the >>belly >>to do what needs to be done" they're thinking in terms of having the belly >>to kill as many as needed. Having the belly to overcome any moral qualms >>about killing innocent people. >> >>Let's pull our heads out of the sand. What's actually on the table is >>Americans dying. And not just because some Americans would die fighting >>their way through Afghanistan to Bin Laden's hideout. >>It's much bigger than that folks. Because to get any troops to >>Afghanistan, >>we'd have to go through Pakistan. Would they let us? Not likely. The >>conquest of Pakistan >>would have to be first. Will other Muslim nations just stand by? You see >>where I'm going. >> >>We're flirting with a world war between Islam and the West. >>And guess what: that's Bin Laden's program. That's exactly what he wants. >>That's why he did this. Read his speeches and statements. It's all right >>there. He really believes Islam would beat the west. It might seem >>ridiculous, but he figures if he can polarize the world into Islam and the >>West, he's got a billion soldiers. If the west wreaks a holocaust in those >>lands, that's a billion people with nothing left to lose, that's even >>better >>from Bin Laden's point of view. He's probably wrong, in the end the west >>would win, whatever that would mean, but the war would last for years and >>millions would die, not just theirs but ours. Who has the belly for that? >>Bin Laden does. Anyone else? >> >>Written By - Tamim Ansary >> >> >> >> >>

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Finding and dealing with the perpetrators of this heinous act is

imperitive... But so is dealing with the larger issue. Hungry and miserable

hordes are the easiest to herd by leaders spewing anger and venom (think

Hitler and the angry and miserable Germans after WW I). If we continue to

adjust the same segment in an individual because it gives temporary

relief,but we do not identify the underlying cause (i.e. posture, egonomics,

short leg, lifestyle...)we have not done anything to offer a solution or

cure. If we bomb a bunch of Arab's cause it feels good but we don't deal

with the underlying misery and intolerance we will only temporarily calm the

situation. Is this the answer?

Seitz, DC

Tuality Physicians

730-D SE Oak St

Hillsboro, OR 97123

>From: " Dr. Shephard, D.C. " <shep@...>

><AboWoman@...>

>CC: " Doctors of Chiro Oregon " < >

>Subject: Perspectives

>Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:35:18 -0700

>

>Minga,

>

>You are right, it's all about perspectives...

>

>But where are you going with your perspective?

>

>How about this for a perspective...

> a.. More American's died last week in NYC than died in the Normandy

>Beach invasion.

> a.. More Americans died last week than in the attack on Pearl Harbor.

>

>And it should also be noted that these were military losses (targets), not

>innocent civilians.

>

>So why are we talking about hypothetical orphaned Afghanistanian children?

>

>As an American, why do you adopt and promulgate such a perspective?

>

>You know what, I don't care about Afghanistanians.

>

>I care about New Yorkers.

>

>I care about our airline industry.

>

>I care about our freedom to move about in this country--by car, or bus or

>plane--without the fear of having a bomb put in my back pocket.

>

>I care about Boeing going bankrupt.

>

>I care about our young soldiers that are now going to have put their lives

>on-the-line.

>

>I don't give a damn about Afghanistan.

>

>I care about the free world and all those who have sacrificed their lives

>and the lives of their loved ones to create the free world over the past

>250 years.

>

>And as for the real issue were all tap dancing around right now--that is,

>what actions the US military and intelligence is going to take in the near

>future, I would also recall: what were our retaliatory measures for

>Hitler's aggression and the aggression of the Japanese?

>

>answer:

> 1.. the devastation and eventual occupation of Germany and,

> 2.. the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

>

>So why should we expect anything less now in the realm of military hell

>fire?

>

>I say we shouldn't expect anything less. We should prepare ourselves

>mentally and physically for the most horrific retaliation and consequence

>(WW3) possible, because this may be a reality.

>

>So what will it take now to gain back control of the security of our

>shores, safety of our people, and to bring peace once again to the free

>world?

>

>We had over 5000 innocent people murdered, senselessly last Tuesday.

>

>Do you honestly expect compassion to remedy this disorder?

>

>So you contend that pacifism is the position to adopt to now bring order to

>the world?

>

>Unlikely.

>

>scott s.

>

>

>

>

_________________________________________________________________

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" If we continue to adjust the same segment in an individual because it gives

temporary

> relief,but we do not identify the underlying cause (i.e. posture,

egonomics,

> short leg, lifestyle...)we have not done anything to offer a solution or

> cure. If we bomb a bunch of Arab's cause it feels good but we don't deal

> with the underlying misery and intolerance we will only temporarily calm

the

> situation. "

What if we adjust the Arabs and bomb the subluxations?

D Freeman

Mailing address: 2480 Liberty Street NE Suite 180

Salem, Oregon 97303

phone 503 763-3528

fax 503 763-3530

pager 888 501-7328

Perspectives

> >Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:35:18 -0700

> >

> >Minga,

> >

> >You are right, it's all about perspectives...

> >

> >But where are you going with your perspective?

> >

> >How about this for a perspective...

> > a.. More American's died last week in NYC than died in the Normandy

> >Beach invasion.

> > a.. More Americans died last week than in the attack on Pearl Harbor.

> >

> >And it should also be noted that these were military losses (targets),

not

> >innocent civilians.

> >

> >So why are we talking about hypothetical orphaned Afghanistanian

children?

> >

> >As an American, why do you adopt and promulgate such a perspective?

> >

> >You know what, I don't care about Afghanistanians.

> >

> >I care about New Yorkers.

> >

> >I care about our airline industry.

> >

> >I care about our freedom to move about in this country--by car, or bus or

> >plane--without the fear of having a bomb put in my back pocket.

> >

> >I care about Boeing going bankrupt.

> >

> >I care about our young soldiers that are now going to have put their

lives

> >on-the-line.

> >

> >I don't give a damn about Afghanistan.

> >

> >I care about the free world and all those who have sacrificed their lives

> >and the lives of their loved ones to create the free world over the past

> >250 years.

> >

> >And as for the real issue were all tap dancing around right now--that is,

> >what actions the US military and intelligence is going to take in the

near

> >future, I would also recall: what were our retaliatory measures for

> >Hitler's aggression and the aggression of the Japanese?

> >

> >answer:

> > 1.. the devastation and eventual occupation of Germany and,

> > 2.. the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

> >

> >So why should we expect anything less now in the realm of military hell

> >fire?

> >

> >I say we shouldn't expect anything less. We should prepare ourselves

> >mentally and physically for the most horrific retaliation and consequence

> >(WW3) possible, because this may be a reality.

> >

> >So what will it take now to gain back control of the security of our

> >shores, safety of our people, and to bring peace once again to the free

> >world?

> >

> >We had over 5000 innocent people murdered, senselessly last Tuesday.

> >

> >Do you honestly expect compassion to remedy this disorder?

> >

> >So you contend that pacifism is the position to adopt to now bring order

to

> >the world?

> >

> >Unlikely.

> >

> >scott s.

> >

> >

> >

> >

>

> _________________________________________________________________

> Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

>

>

>

>

>

>

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We have to all aggree on the definition/nature of the subluxation first!

Seitz, DC

Tuality Physicians

730-D SE Oak St

Hillsboro, OR 97123

>From: " Dr. Freeman " <drmfreeman@...>

> " Oregon DCs " < >

>Subject: Re: Perspectives

>Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 15:02:25 -0700

>

> " If we continue to adjust the same segment in an individual because it

>gives

>temporary

> > relief,but we do not identify the underlying cause (i.e. posture,

>egonomics,

> > short leg, lifestyle...)we have not done anything to offer a solution or

> > cure. If we bomb a bunch of Arab's cause it feels good but we don't

>deal

> > with the underlying misery and intolerance we will only temporarily calm

>the

> > situation. "

>

>What if we adjust the Arabs and bomb the subluxations?

>

> D Freeman

>Mailing address: 2480 Liberty Street NE Suite 180

>Salem, Oregon 97303

>phone 503 763-3528

>fax 503 763-3530

>pager 888 501-7328

>

> Perspectives

> > >Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:35:18 -0700

> > >

> > >Minga,

> > >

> > >You are right, it's all about perspectives...

> > >

> > >But where are you going with your perspective?

> > >

> > >How about this for a perspective...

> > > a.. More American's died last week in NYC than died in the Normandy

> > >Beach invasion.

> > > a.. More Americans died last week than in the attack on Pearl

>Harbor.

> > >

> > >And it should also be noted that these were military losses (targets),

>not

> > >innocent civilians.

> > >

> > >So why are we talking about hypothetical orphaned Afghanistanian

>children?

> > >

> > >As an American, why do you adopt and promulgate such a perspective?

> > >

> > >You know what, I don't care about Afghanistanians.

> > >

> > >I care about New Yorkers.

> > >

> > >I care about our airline industry.

> > >

> > >I care about our freedom to move about in this country--by car, or bus

>or

> > >plane--without the fear of having a bomb put in my back pocket.

> > >

> > >I care about Boeing going bankrupt.

> > >

> > >I care about our young soldiers that are now going to have put their

>lives

> > >on-the-line.

> > >

> > >I don't give a damn about Afghanistan.

> > >

> > >I care about the free world and all those who have sacrificed their

>lives

> > >and the lives of their loved ones to create the free world over the

>past

> > >250 years.

> > >

> > >And as for the real issue were all tap dancing around right now--that

>is,

> > >what actions the US military and intelligence is going to take in the

>near

> > >future, I would also recall: what were our retaliatory measures for

> > >Hitler's aggression and the aggression of the Japanese?

> > >

> > >answer:

> > > 1.. the devastation and eventual occupation of Germany and,

> > > 2.. the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

> > >

> > >So why should we expect anything less now in the realm of military hell

> > >fire?

> > >

> > >I say we shouldn't expect anything less. We should prepare ourselves

> > >mentally and physically for the most horrific retaliation and

>consequence

> > >(WW3) possible, because this may be a reality.

> > >

> > >So what will it take now to gain back control of the security of our

> > >shores, safety of our people, and to bring peace once again to the free

> > >world?

> > >

> > >We had over 5000 innocent people murdered, senselessly last Tuesday.

> > >

> > >Do you honestly expect compassion to remedy this disorder?

> > >

> > >So you contend that pacifism is the position to adopt to now bring

>order

>to

> > >the world?

> > >

> > >Unlikely.

> > >

> > >scott s.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> >

> > _________________________________________________________________

> > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at

>http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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<snip>

>What if we adjust the Arabs and bomb the subluxations?

>

> D Freeman

Well, I do remember one philosophically minded chiro who thought that if we

had only been able to adjust Hitler, there would have been no WWII.

Terry

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Best idea I have heard yet maybe we should send a special team over.

Steve Kinne

Perspectives

> > >Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:35:18 -0700

> > >

> > >Minga,

> > >

> > >You are right, it's all about perspectives...

> > >

> > >But where are you going with your perspective?

> > >

> > >How about this for a perspective...

> > > a.. More American's died last week in NYC than died in the Normandy

> > >Beach invasion.

> > > a.. More Americans died last week than in the attack on Pearl

Harbor.

> > >

> > >And it should also be noted that these were military losses (targets),

> not

> > >innocent civilians.

> > >

> > >So why are we talking about hypothetical orphaned Afghanistanian

> children?

> > >

> > >As an American, why do you adopt and promulgate such a perspective?

> > >

> > >You know what, I don't care about Afghanistanians.

> > >

> > >I care about New Yorkers.

> > >

> > >I care about our airline industry.

> > >

> > >I care about our freedom to move about in this country--by car, or bus

or

> > >plane--without the fear of having a bomb put in my back pocket.

> > >

> > >I care about Boeing going bankrupt.

> > >

> > >I care about our young soldiers that are now going to have put their

> lives

> > >on-the-line.

> > >

> > >I don't give a damn about Afghanistan.

> > >

> > >I care about the free world and all those who have sacrificed their

lives

> > >and the lives of their loved ones to create the free world over the

past

> > >250 years.

> > >

> > >And as for the real issue were all tap dancing around right now--that

is,

> > >what actions the US military and intelligence is going to take in the

> near

> > >future, I would also recall: what were our retaliatory measures for

> > >Hitler's aggression and the aggression of the Japanese?

> > >

> > >answer:

> > > 1.. the devastation and eventual occupation of Germany and,

> > > 2.. the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

> > >

> > >So why should we expect anything less now in the realm of military hell

> > >fire?

> > >

> > >I say we shouldn't expect anything less. We should prepare ourselves

> > >mentally and physically for the most horrific retaliation and

consequence

> > >(WW3) possible, because this may be a reality.

> > >

> > >So what will it take now to gain back control of the security of our

> > >shores, safety of our people, and to bring peace once again to the free

> > >world?

> > >

> > >We had over 5000 innocent people murdered, senselessly last Tuesday.

> > >

> > >Do you honestly expect compassion to remedy this disorder?

> > >

> > >So you contend that pacifism is the position to adopt to now bring

order

> to

> > >the world?

> > >

> > >Unlikely.

> > >

> > >scott s.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> >

> > _________________________________________________________________

> > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at

http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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Perhaps a little St. 's Wort in the water also.

sharron fuchs dc

Re: Perspectives

Best idea I have heard yet maybe we should send a special team over.

Steve Kinne

Perspectives

> > >Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2001 12:35:18 -0700

> > >

> > >Minga,

> > >

> > >You are right, it's all about perspectives...

> > >

> > >But where are you going with your perspective?

> > >

> > >How about this for a perspective...

> > > a.. More American's died last week in NYC than died in the Normandy

> > >Beach invasion.

> > > a.. More Americans died last week than in the attack on Pearl

Harbor.

> > >

> > >And it should also be noted that these were military losses (targets),

> not

> > >innocent civilians.

> > >

> > >So why are we talking about hypothetical orphaned Afghanistanian

> children?

> > >

> > >As an American, why do you adopt and promulgate such a perspective?

> > >

> > >You know what, I don't care about Afghanistanians.

> > >

> > >I care about New Yorkers.

> > >

> > >I care about our airline industry.

> > >

> > >I care about our freedom to move about in this country--by car, or bus

or

> > >plane--without the fear of having a bomb put in my back pocket.

> > >

> > >I care about Boeing going bankrupt.

> > >

> > >I care about our young soldiers that are now going to have put their

> lives

> > >on-the-line.

> > >

> > >I don't give a damn about Afghanistan.

> > >

> > >I care about the free world and all those who have sacrificed their

lives

> > >and the lives of their loved ones to create the free world over the

past

> > >250 years.

> > >

> > >And as for the real issue were all tap dancing around right now--that

is,

> > >what actions the US military and intelligence is going to take in the

> near

> > >future, I would also recall: what were our retaliatory measures for

> > >Hitler's aggression and the aggression of the Japanese?

> > >

> > >answer:

> > > 1.. the devastation and eventual occupation of Germany and,

> > > 2.. the dropping of two atomic bombs on Japan.

> > >

> > >So why should we expect anything less now in the realm of military hell

> > >fire?

> > >

> > >I say we shouldn't expect anything less. We should prepare ourselves

> > >mentally and physically for the most horrific retaliation and

consequence

> > >(WW3) possible, because this may be a reality.

> > >

> > >So what will it take now to gain back control of the security of our

> > >shores, safety of our people, and to bring peace once again to the free

> > >world?

> > >

> > >We had over 5000 innocent people murdered, senselessly last Tuesday.

> > >

> > >Do you honestly expect compassion to remedy this disorder?

> > >

> > >So you contend that pacifism is the position to adopt to now bring

order

> to

> > >the world?

> > >

> > >Unlikely.

> > >

> > >scott s.

> > >

> > >

> > >

> > >

> >

> > _________________________________________________________________

> > Get your FREE download of MSN Explorer at

http://explorer.msn.com/intl.asp

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

> >

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  • 5 months later...
Guest guest

something touching

Hi, This should give you something to think about.I don't normally forwarded things, but I wanted to share this one.Perspectives....This will give you cold chills, but puts life into perspective!At a fund-raising dinner for a school that serves learning-disabled children, the father of one of the school's students delivered a speech that would never be forgotten by all who attended. After extolling the school and its dedicated staff, he offered a question."Everything God does is done with perfection. Yet, my son, Shay, cannot learn things as other children do. He cannot understand things as other children do. Where is God's plan reflected in my son?" The audience was stilled by the query. The father continued. "I believe," the father answered, "that when God brings a child like Shay into the world, an opportunity to realize the Divine Plan presents itself. And it comes in the way people treat that child."Then, he told the following story:Shay and his father had walked past apark where some boys Shay knew were playing baseball. Shay asked, "Do you think they will let me play?" Shay's father knew that most boys would not want him on their team. But the father understood that if his son were allowed to play it would give him a much-needed sense of belonging.Shay's father approached one of the boys on the field and asked if Shay could play. The boy looked around for guidance from his teammates. Getting none, he took matters into his own hands and said, "We are losing by six runs, and the game is in the eighth inning. I guess he can be on our team and we'll try to put him up to bat in the ninth inning." In the bottom of the eighth inning, Shay's team scored a few runs but was still behind by three.At the top of the ninth inning, Shay put on a glove and played in the outfield. Although no hits came his way, he was obviously ecstatic just to be on the field, grinning from ear to ear as his father waved to him from the stands.In the bottom of the ninth inning, Shay's team scored again. Now, with two outs and bases loaded, the potential winning run was on base. Shay was scheduled to be the next at-bat. Would the team actually let Shay bat at this juncture and give away their chance to win the game? Surprisingly, Shay was given the bat. Everyone knew that a hit was all but impossible because Shay didn't even know how to hold the bat properly, much less connect with the ball. However, as Shay stepped up to the plate, the pitcher moved a few steps to lob the ball in softly so Shay could at least be able to make contact. The first pitch came and Shay swung clumsily and missed.The pitcher again took a few steps forward to toss the ball softly toward Shay. As the pitch came in, Shay swung at the ball and hit a slow ground ball to the pitcher. The pitcher picked up the soft grounder and could easily have thrown the ball to the first baseman. Shay would have been out and that would have ended the game.Instead, the pitcher took the ball and threw it on a high arc to right field, far beyond reach of the first baseman. Everyone started yelling, "Shay, run to first. Run to first." Never in his life had Shay ever made it to first base. He scampered down the baseline, wide-eyed and startled.Everyone yelled "Run to second, run to second!" By the time Shay was rounding first base, the right fielder had the ball. He could have thrown the ball to the second baseman for a tag. But the right fielder understood what the pitcher's intentions had been, so he threw the ball high and far over the third baseman's head. Shay ran towards second base as the runners ahead of him deliriously circled the bases towards home.As Shay reached second base, the opposing shortstop ran to him, turned him in the direction of third base, and shouted, "Run to third!" As Shay rounded third, the boys from both teams were screaming, "Shay! Run home!"Shay ran home, stepped on home plate and was cheered as the hero, for hitting a "grand slam" and winning the game for his team."That day," said the father softly with tears now rolling down his face, "the boys from both teams helped bring a piece of the Divine Plan into this world."And now, a footnote to the story. We all send thousands of jokes through e-mail without a second thought, but when it comes to sending messages regarding life choices, people think twice about sharing. The crude, vulgar, and sometimes the obscene pass freely through cyberspace, but public discussion of decency is too often suppressed in school and the workplace.If you are thinking about forwarding this message, you are probably thinking about which people on your address list aren't the "appropriate" ones to receive this type of message. The person who sent this to you believes that we can all make a difference. We all have thousands of opportunities a day to help realize your God's plan. So many seemingly trivial interactions between two people present us with a choice: Do we pass along a spark of the Divine? Or do we pass up that opportunity, and leave the world a bit colder in the process?You have two choices now:1. Delete this.2. Forward it to the people you care about.You know the choice I made.

---Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).Version: 6.0.320 / Virus Database: 179 - Release Date: 30/01/2002

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Guest guest

LOVED IT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! THANKS

Helen

something touching

"Encourage one another. Many times a word of praise or thanks or appreciation or cheer has kept people on their feet."

- Swindoll

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  • 1 year later...
Guest guest

Passing this on with permission. Please include the author if you continue

it. I think I will do exactly what she wanted to do....great idea. Melinda,

ironic timing too. Hope the trip back goes better. I get looks too from

parent's that can't understand why I have to bring a double stroller and pick up

my

4 yr old so we can leave the park! We don't always have a problem but enough

to where I don't leave home without it.

Johanna

I don't know if y'all might be interested in this, or not.  Writing is my

outlet when I am feeling stressed or overwhelmed.  Usually, I write stories

(sci-fi fan fiction) where I can take out my stress on imaginary

characters -- hehe), but in moments when I feel overwhelmed about the

future's uncertainty, I will write about personal experiences.  Such as this

one.   This story is based on something  that happened about five years.

It's been fictionalized -- my son is not exactly like the boy in the

story --  but the overall events are true.  And I can still feel the

emotions as if it happened yesterday.

 

Maggie  :)

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

Perspectives

©Maggie Hutchinson 2003

 

" I would never let my child behave like that. "

 

The words, spoken with a biting tone that stung as much as if the woman had

struck me, rang in my ears.  My face flushed, burned.  My heart was

thumping.  I snapped my head in the direction of the voice.  Two women stood

together, staring my way, shoulder to shoulder, a smug superiority written

in their stance as they gazed on in judgment.

 

 *I would never let my child behave like that.*

 

At my feet, my son, Jack, laid kicking and screaming, his voice echoing

through the Wal-Mart with a shrill, piercing pitch.  Impossible to ignore.

 

The two women leaned in to further discuss the scene before them, their

voices now inaudible but the slight shake of a head unmistakable.  No decent

parent would let their child behave like this in public.

 

Let.  Let?  If they only knew.  I wanted to cry, to yell, to scream at them.

Let?

 

Instead, I turned away, taking a deep, shaking breath, and gazed at Jack.

He was quiet now, for the moment, tired from the exertion.  His 4-year-old

face was flushed and his dark hair damp with sweat against his forehead.

His eyebrows furrowed as he glared not at me but just past me.  The fury

might be past, or the respite might be temporary.  I switched my own gaze to

a spot on the floor next to him, not making eye contact but still watching

him, waiting.

 

My own ire burned deep in my chest.  I wanted to confront those women, those

nameless moral adjudicators of my family, of my life, of my child.  But I

felt frozen, torn, knowing that my main concern was Jack.  They had moved

on, anyway, bored with the scene but satisfied, knowing that I had heard

them.  Their message had been communicated, along with the implication that

they were the superior parents.

 

Jack appeared to be calming.  His breaths were slower, his face less tense.

It would be temporary, I knew, however.  But I had no choice.  My greatest

desire was to escape, to just get out of that wide open department store

where everyone would look at us and see the surface reflection:  a

4-year-old boy, normal by all appearances, who had learned that throwing a

tantrum would get him what he wanted.  A spoiled child with weak parents.

It was always the parents.  If they would just apply a little discipline,

bother to teach their child, this would never happen.

 

Fives minutes earlier Jack had been the content, typical child, trailing

behind his mother as we shopped for clothes in the Wal-Mart.  The selection

of items that we needed was slung across my arm now, soon to be discarded

because I knew that getting through a check-out line would be impossible,

unless I wanted to face more accusing stares.  No, the clothes would have to

wait now.

 

A shiny, red, die-cast semi-truck had seen to that.  We had just about

finished; all I had needed was a package of socks.  Heading towards the shoe

and sock area, we had gone around the baby row.  Jack was trailing behind

just slightly, a small, well-worn, Matchbox fire truck held eye level as he

walked.  Somehow, he was able to follow me while moving the toy back and

forth across his line of sight, his gaze fixed on the visual patterns it

created.  We walked into the main aisle where a display of replica vehicles

had been erected.  Nowhere near the toy aisle.  I had thought we were safe

from such distractions, had purposefully avoided them.  But I couldn't

contend with randomly placed displays.

 

He almost walked right past, unaware, lost in his own thoughts, yet still

able to navigate after me.  Almost.  Then the bright red truck caught his

eye.  He stopped, staring at it, transfixed.  I felt my adrenaline pump

because I knew what was next.  And knew of no way to avoid it.  A moment of

silence dominated while I awaited the inevitable.

 

" Truck. "   He stared at it, arms at his side, the fire engine forgotten now.

" Truck.  Truck, truck, truck. "   He pointed to it and gazed at me.  " Truck. "

There was the slightest edge to his tone now.

 

" We need to go, " I had said quietly, starting to move on.

 

" Truck, truck! "   His voice was louder, more insistent.

 

I motioned for him to follow and kept walking, slowly.  A glance at the sign

atop the display revealed the price to $14.99.  Ouch.  Too expensive, way

too expensive.  And not an option, anyway.  To give in would be the easy

way out and would set the expectation.  But had I simply purchased the

truck, we could have moved on, the quiet preserved, safe in our own world

with no intruding stares passing judgment on us.

 

One day.  One day, in a year or two, Jack would be able to see such a

display of vehicles and be able to pause, admire them, hold them, and then

walk on by.  But not now, not at this age, not at this time in his life when

bright red semi-trucks were more precious than anything to him.  They were

his world.  He held them, admired them, lined them up in long, straight rows

on the floor, studied them.  He would hold one at eye level to examine the

tires and marvel at the image formed when he moved one in and out of his

peripheral vision.  He could ride for hours in a car when we went on

vacations, staring transfixed out the car window, hands shooting up to press

against his ears at the sound as the big semis roared by but gazing in

rapture at them.  He never complained that he was bored, never asked about

when we would arrive, never whined about how long the trip was, even when we

drove all day.  He was content because the highway presented an endless

supply of semi-trucks, trains in the distance, campers, and cars for him to

watch.

 

One day, but not this day.

 

I took a deep breath and put my hand on his arm.  " Let's go, " I said

quietly.

 

" No! " The word pierced the quiet of the store and shattered our privacy.

" No, no, no! "

 

" Come, " I said, pulling on his arm.  But he resisted, yanked his arm, and

finally flopped downward.  His arm slid from my grasp.

 

" No! " he screamed.  He kicked and stomped his feet on the floor, banged his

fists, and proceeding to wail in a high, ear-splitting screech.

 

He paused for a breath every half minute, or so, before continuing to flail

and scream.  In the momentary silence, the words hit me.

 

*I would never let my child behave like that.*

 

Let?  Let? How dare they stand in judgment of a situation about which they

knew nothing.  They saw before them only the reflection of their normal

world and normal lives, lives that followed the rules of the normal society.

Children do not yell and scream in public.

 

But our world, our life was not " normal. "   It was different, it was

challenging yet special.  A life of extremes, where one moment was filled by

the joyful, careful examination of a ladybug, marveling at nature's little

work of art, the next racked with frustration and turmoil as one small boy

tried to make sense of an overwhelming world.

 

One small, special child, who had changed our lives forever and had taken us

down a different path then that of most parents.  This path was uneven and

rough, not neatly paved and straight. It twisted and turned, climbing and

descending so that the end was never clearly in sight.  It was marked with

uncertainty and fears.  But it also led through moments of wonder and gave

us a new perspective on life.

 

Jack was sitting now, calmer, but I could still read the determination in

his eyes; he was not finished with this battle.  He was watching me and

awaiting my next move.  I took a deep breath to calm my trembling nerves.

Had I the time, I might have marched up to those two women and asked them

the question that was burning in my mind.  But my feelings of anger and

injustice were secondary.  Getting out of the store and letting the

situation diffuse itself was paramount.

 

I bent down to catch Jack's eye, to know that he was listening.  " It's time

to go, " I stated as calmly as possible, yet not quite keeping the edge off

my voice.  I closed my eyes and steeled myself, knowing that the next moment

would bring another small explosion, another loud, public display.

Eventually, after enough time had passed, once we were away from the

irresistible object, life would return to our version of normal.  And

another small step would be taken in the learning process for him.

 

That moment in time would stay with me for a long time, burned into my

memory by those critical words.  Yet, I would not change our life or our

child.  He has so many beautiful qualities to balance out the difficulties.

I would not change him.

 

I would, however, challenge others to view our life from a different

perspective.  After we got home, after the screaming had died, the kicking

stopped, the calm restored, I sat down at our computer.  Jack was on the

floor playing with his huge collection of cars and trucks, lining them up in

a straight row, bumper to bumper, and then lying with his face pressed

against the hard kitchen floor to put himself at eye level with the tires,

enveloped in the images and patterns he saw.  Quiet, happy.  At the

computer, I typed up several business-sized cards and printed them out to

put in my wallet.  Each contained one question, the one that had burned in

my mind early.  Next time, if someone presumed to evaluate my life, I

intended to walk up to them and hand them one of these cards, and then walk

away to deal with whatever the  situation  might be.  Then, they could

either choose to think twice or ignore my message, but, at least, they would

have the opportunity to learn and grow beyond their view of what was

  " normal " and " acceptable. "

 

The card would say: " Do you know what autism is? "

 

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Guest guest

That is awesome. Thanx for sharing.

a

> Passing this on with permission. Please include the author if you

continue

> it. I think I will do exactly what she wanted to do....great

idea. Melinda,

> ironic timing too. Hope the trip back goes better. I get looks

too from

> parent's that can't understand why I have to bring a double

stroller and pick up my

> 4 yr old so we can leave the park! We don't always have a problem

but enough

> to where I don't leave home without it.

> Johanna

>

>

>

> I don't know if y'all might be interested in this, or not.  Writing

is my

> outlet when I am feeling stressed or overwhelmed.  Usually, I write

stories

> (sci-fi fan fiction) where I can take out my stress on imaginary

> characters -- hehe), but in moments when I feel overwhelmed about

the

> future's uncertainty, I will write about personal experiences. 

Such as this

> one.   This story is based on something  that happened about five

years.

> It's been fictionalized -- my son is not exactly like the boy in the

> story --  but the overall events are true.  And I can still feel the

> emotions as if it happened yesterday.

>  

> Maggie  :)

>  

> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

>  

> Perspectives

> ©Maggie Hutchinson 2003

>

>

>  

> " I would never let my child behave like that. "

>  

> The words, spoken with a biting tone that stung as much as if the

woman had

> struck me, rang in my ears.  My face flushed, burned.  My heart was

> thumping.  I snapped my head in the direction of the voice.  Two

women stood

> together, staring my way, shoulder to shoulder, a smug superiority

written

> in their stance as they gazed on in judgment.

>  

>  *I would never let my child behave like that.*

>  

> At my feet, my son, Jack, laid kicking and screaming, his voice

echoing

> through the Wal-Mart with a shrill, piercing pitch.  Impossible to

ignore.

>  

> The two women leaned in to further discuss the scene before them,

their

> voices now inaudible but the slight shake of a head unmistakable. 

No decent

> parent would let their child behave like this in public.

>  

> Let.  Let?  If they only knew.  I wanted to cry, to yell, to scream

at them.

> Let?

>  

> Instead, I turned away, taking a deep, shaking breath, and gazed at

Jack.

> He was quiet now, for the moment, tired from the exertion.  His 4-

year-old

> face was flushed and his dark hair damp with sweat against his

forehead.

> His eyebrows furrowed as he glared not at me but just past me.  The

fury

> might be past, or the respite might be temporary.  I switched my

own gaze to

> a spot on the floor next to him, not making eye contact but still

watching

> him, waiting.

>  

> My own ire burned deep in my chest.  I wanted to confront those

women, those

> nameless moral adjudicators of my family, of my life, of my child. 

But I

> felt frozen, torn, knowing that my main concern was Jack.  They had

moved

> on, anyway, bored with the scene but satisfied, knowing that I had

heard

> them.  Their message had been communicated, along with the

implication that

> they were the superior parents.

>  

> Jack appeared to be calming.  His breaths were slower, his face

less tense.

> It would be temporary, I knew, however.  But I had no choice.  My

greatest

> desire was to escape, to just get out of that wide open department

store

> where everyone would look at us and see the surface reflection:  a

> 4-year-old boy, normal by all appearances, who had learned that

throwing a

> tantrum would get him what he wanted.  A spoiled child with weak

parents.

> It was always the parents.  If they would just apply a little

discipline,

> bother to teach their child, this would never happen.

>  

> Fives minutes earlier Jack had been the content, typical child,

trailing

> behind his mother as we shopped for clothes in the Wal-Mart.  The

selection

> of items that we needed was slung across my arm now, soon to be

discarded

> because I knew that getting through a check-out line would be

impossible,

> unless I wanted to face more accusing stares.  No, the clothes

would have to

> wait now.

>  

> A shiny, red, die-cast semi-truck had seen to that.  We had just

about

> finished; all I had needed was a package of socks.  Heading towards

the shoe

> and sock area, we had gone around the baby row.  Jack was trailing

behind

> just slightly, a small, well-worn, Matchbox fire truck held eye

level as he

> walked.  Somehow, he was able to follow me while moving the toy

back and

> forth across his line of sight, his gaze fixed on the visual

patterns it

> created.  We walked into the main aisle where a display of replica

vehicles

> had been erected.  Nowhere near the toy aisle.  I had thought we

were safe

> from such distractions, had purposefully avoided them.  But I

couldn't

> contend with randomly placed displays.

>  

> He almost walked right past, unaware, lost in his own thoughts, yet

still

> able to navigate after me.  Almost.  Then the bright red truck

caught his

> eye.  He stopped, staring at it, transfixed.  I felt my adrenaline

pump

> because I knew what was next.  And knew of no way to avoid it.  A

moment of

> silence dominated while I awaited the inevitable.

>  

> " Truck. "   He stared at it, arms at his side, the fire engine

forgotten now.

> " Truck.  Truck, truck, truck. "   He pointed to it and gazed at

me.  " Truck. "

> There was the slightest edge to his tone now.

>  

> " We need to go, " I had said quietly, starting to move on.

>  

> " Truck, truck! "   His voice was louder, more insistent.

>  

> I motioned for him to follow and kept walking, slowly.  A glance at

the sign

> atop the display revealed the price to $14.99.  Ouch.  Too

expensive, way

> too expensive.  And not an option, anyway.  To give in would be the

easy

> way out and would set the expectation.  But had I simply purchased

the

> truck, we could have moved on, the quiet preserved, safe in our own

world

> with no intruding stares passing judgment on us.

>  

> One day.  One day, in a year or two, Jack would be able to see such

a

> display of vehicles and be able to pause, admire them, hold them,

and then

> walk on by.  But not now, not at this age, not at this time in his

life when

> bright red semi-trucks were more precious than anything to him. 

They were

> his world.  He held them, admired them, lined them up in long,

straight rows

> on the floor, studied them.  He would hold one at eye level to

examine the

> tires and marvel at the image formed when he moved one in and out

of his

> peripheral vision.  He could ride for hours in a car when we went on

> vacations, staring transfixed out the car window, hands shooting up

to press

> against his ears at the sound as the big semis roared by but gazing

in

> rapture at them.  He never complained that he was bored, never

asked about

> when we would arrive, never whined about how long the trip was,

even when we

> drove all day.  He was content because the highway presented an

endless

> supply of semi-trucks, trains in the distance, campers, and cars

for him to

> watch.

>  

> One day, but not this day.

>  

> I took a deep breath and put my hand on his arm.  " Let's go, " I said

> quietly.

>  

> " No! " The word pierced the quiet of the store and shattered our

privacy.

> " No, no, no! "

>  

> " Come, " I said, pulling on his arm.  But he resisted, yanked his

arm, and

> finally flopped downward.  His arm slid from my grasp.

>  

> " No! " he screamed.  He kicked and stomped his feet on the floor,

banged his

> fists, and proceeding to wail in a high, ear-splitting screech.

>  

> He paused for a breath every half minute, or so, before continuing

to flail

> and scream.  In the momentary silence, the words hit me.

>  

> *I would never let my child behave like that.*

>  

> Let?  Let? How dare they stand in judgment of a situation about

which they

> knew nothing.  They saw before them only the reflection of their

normal

> world and normal lives, lives that followed the rules of the normal

society.

> Children do not yell and scream in public.

>  

> But our world, our life was not " normal. "   It was different, it was

> challenging yet special.  A life of extremes, where one moment was

filled by

> the joyful, careful examination of a ladybug, marveling at nature's

little

> work of art, the next racked with frustration and turmoil as one

small boy

> tried to make sense of an overwhelming world.

>  

> One small, special child, who had changed our lives forever and had

taken us

> down a different path then that of most parents.  This path was

uneven and

> rough, not neatly paved and straight. It twisted and turned,

climbing and

> descending so that the end was never clearly in sight.  It was

marked with

> uncertainty and fears.  But it also led through moments of wonder

and gave

> us a new perspective on life.

>  

> Jack was sitting now, calmer, but I could still read the

determination in

> his eyes; he was not finished with this battle.  He was watching me

and

> awaiting my next move.  I took a deep breath to calm my trembling

nerves.

> Had I the time, I might have marched up to those two women and

asked them

> the question that was burning in my mind.  But my feelings of anger

and

> injustice were secondary.  Getting out of the store and letting the

> situation diffuse itself was paramount.

>  

> I bent down to catch Jack's eye, to know that he was

listening.  " It's time

> to go, " I stated as calmly as possible, yet not quite keeping the

edge off

> my voice.  I closed my eyes and steeled myself, knowing that the

next moment

> would bring another small explosion, another loud, public display.

> Eventually, after enough time had passed, once we were away from the

> irresistible object, life would return to our version of normal. 

And

> another small step would be taken in the learning process for him.

>  

> That moment in time would stay with me for a long time, burned into

my

> memory by those critical words.  Yet, I would not change our life

or our

> child.  He has so many beautiful qualities to balance out the

difficulties.

> I would not change him.

>  

> I would, however, challenge others to view our life from a different

> perspective.  After we got home, after the screaming had died, the

kicking

> stopped, the calm restored, I sat down at our computer.  Jack was

on the

> floor playing with his huge collection of cars and trucks, lining

them up in

> a straight row, bumper to bumper, and then lying with his face

pressed

> against the hard kitchen floor to put himself at eye level with the

tires,

> enveloped in the images and patterns he saw.  Quiet, happy.  At the

> computer, I typed up several business-sized cards and printed them

out to

> put in my wallet.  Each contained one question, the one that had

burned in

> my mind early.  Next time, if someone presumed to evaluate my life,

I

> intended to walk up to them and hand them one of these cards, and

then walk

> away to deal with whatever the  situation  might be.  Then, they

could

> either choose to think twice or ignore my message, but, at least,

they would

> have the opportunity to learn and grow beyond their view of what was

>   " normal " and " acceptable. "

>  

> The card would say: " Do you know what autism is? "

>  

>

>

>

>

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