Quote from: Jill F on December 29, 2013, 07:23:04 PM
What REALLY gets to me is people who let their kids run wild and scream at restaurants. If it's fast food or hightly unfancy, I don't care. It's my fault for going there in the first place. But when I'm out dropping over a hundred bucks on dinner, I would like to relax. And I mean Jillax. Some snot nosed punk trying to hide under my table while I'm eating is unfreakingacceptable. And when it's after 9PM, those rugrats should be in bed and not screaming in my ear.
For normally developing children, I absolutely agree. The challenge comes in when dealing with atypically developing children--notably those with ASD. Parenting a child with ASD (which, full disclosure, I do) is very difficult. By definition, they have very poor awareness of social conventions and expectations and many have extreme sensory needs (sensory-seeking or sensory-avoidant). Couple these together and what do you get? Self-stimming behaviour that can be quite loud and, frankly, obnoxious.
While attempting to eat in restaurants, my son has:-run away from the table starting a game of "catch me if you can"
-spun in circles
-thrown food
-entered the kitchen without permission
-screamed at the top of his lungs
-had to be carried out to the car (repeatedly)
-refused to come out from under the table
-refused to come down from the top of the booth bench
the list goes on...
I can assure you with absolute confidence that never once have I enjoyed or supported these behaviours. Unfortunately, that is my son's authentic response to his reality and I have to accept and respect it (as we expect others to accept and respect
our difference). We have always responded with firm, but compassionate, reinforcement of expectations, which often changes
very little nothing in the moment.
Fine, you say. But why would you bring a kid like this to a nice restaurant?
Short answer #1: because exposure and explicit training are the only way these kids learn how to behave. Keep them home where they won't bother people and you might as well write them off.
Short answer #2: because parenting a high-needs child is exhausting and cause a lot of anxiety. Striving for normal adult living is natural, normal, and healthy.
Point of the rant: next time you see a kid behaving abhorrently in a restaurant, it might be because mum and dad have poor parenting skills and it might be because the child's neurochemistry and brain structure makes it the best they can manage.