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husband and Asperger's kids in class
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<blockquote data-quote="BusynMember" data-source="post: 74068" data-attributes="member: 1550"><p>Wish you luck and glad hub understands. However, not all Aspies sit alone and won't be touched. My son has "Less" than an Aspie (Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD)-not otherwise specified) and is very talkative and friendly. He doesn't like being touched, but he won't pull away if you touch him. There are all kinds of kids on the spectrum. My son prefers to be alone at home and do his obsessions (mostly what seem like normal stuff taken to the extreme--videogames and computers). But it IS extreme and not within the normal limits--that is all he'd do unsupervised. However, at school, where he knows everyone, he is talkative and friendly and extremely compassionate, especially towards peers who have obvious special needs. Aspies are not all the same. The ones who are less obvious, you probably wouldn'[t know about.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BusynMember, post: 74068, member: 1550"] Wish you luck and glad hub understands. However, not all Aspies sit alone and won't be touched. My son has "Less" than an Aspie (Pervasive Developmental Disorder (PDD)-not otherwise specified) and is very talkative and friendly. He doesn't like being touched, but he won't pull away if you touch him. There are all kinds of kids on the spectrum. My son prefers to be alone at home and do his obsessions (mostly what seem like normal stuff taken to the extreme--videogames and computers). But it IS extreme and not within the normal limits--that is all he'd do unsupervised. However, at school, where he knows everyone, he is talkative and friendly and extremely compassionate, especially towards peers who have obvious special needs. Aspies are not all the same. The ones who are less obvious, you probably wouldn'[t know about. [/QUOTE]
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