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Parent Emeritus
Rats! Two separate friends want difficult child#1 to move in with them.
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<blockquote data-quote="DDD" data-source="post: 463315" data-attributes="member: 35"><p>Hound thanks for asking. Thank heavens he only had seizures shortly after his brain surgery. He was on medications to prevent them for a couple of years and then weaned off. Yeah, we are fortunate.</p><p></p><p>The attorneys he hired are trying for an appeal. I have detached from that completely. In fact his disabilities are not obvious, they are not consistent, most of the time he really "presents" well. He just doesn't have consistency in his focus and capabilities. Some weeks he functions well and some weeks he doesn't. With our business we can "pick" the times that work best to have him come in. Obviously for employers in the real world you have to be relied upon no matter what the task...even if you are a "potato chip cutter". Geez, I still can't get over the Government listing that job for the younger difficult child. Is that nuts or what?? DDD</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DDD, post: 463315, member: 35"] Hound thanks for asking. Thank heavens he only had seizures shortly after his brain surgery. He was on medications to prevent them for a couple of years and then weaned off. Yeah, we are fortunate. The attorneys he hired are trying for an appeal. I have detached from that completely. In fact his disabilities are not obvious, they are not consistent, most of the time he really "presents" well. He just doesn't have consistency in his focus and capabilities. Some weeks he functions well and some weeks he doesn't. With our business we can "pick" the times that work best to have him come in. Obviously for employers in the real world you have to be relied upon no matter what the task...even if you are a "potato chip cutter". Geez, I still can't get over the Government listing that job for the younger difficult child. Is that nuts or what?? DDD [/QUOTE]
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Rats! Two separate friends want difficult child#1 to move in with them.
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