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<blockquote data-quote="nvts" data-source="post: 68316" data-attributes="member: 3814"><p>Some autism doesn't show as a delay that is obvious to people. My difficult child 1 and difficult child 2 both have Asperger's syndrome which is considered to be on the autistic spectrum. </p><p></p><p>difficult child 1 spoke in tiny sentences by the end of his 9th month (I want that). He was holding entire conversations with everyone clearly and intelligently way before the age of 2 (telling my husband that a chrysallis is "just a caterpillars cacoon" and that it would mature in a few weeks" - - he was 1yr 10mos.). He was "creepy smart". But not get his way - BBBOOOOOOOMMMMMM!!!!!</p><p>The quirks started really showing up to us by the time he was 2.5 yrs old, but his doctor, teachers, preschool aids, etc. just thought he was hyper.</p><p></p><p>difficult child 2 had a speech delay so bad that most people still have trouble understanding him and his sentence structure is a nightmare! But he's a funloving, easy going kid who only wants to make people happy.</p><p></p><p>The point is: autism has more faces than you could ever imagine. Get a neuropsyche done by a neuropsychologist and keep your mind open to different diagnosis. It could be a "mind-blowing" experience and could possibly change the way things are done!</p><p></p><p>Good luck!</p><p>Beth</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="nvts, post: 68316, member: 3814"] Some autism doesn't show as a delay that is obvious to people. My difficult child 1 and difficult child 2 both have Asperger's syndrome which is considered to be on the autistic spectrum. difficult child 1 spoke in tiny sentences by the end of his 9th month (I want that). He was holding entire conversations with everyone clearly and intelligently way before the age of 2 (telling my husband that a chrysallis is "just a caterpillars cacoon" and that it would mature in a few weeks" - - he was 1yr 10mos.). He was "creepy smart". But not get his way - BBBOOOOOOOMMMMMM!!!!! The quirks started really showing up to us by the time he was 2.5 yrs old, but his doctor, teachers, preschool aids, etc. just thought he was hyper. difficult child 2 had a speech delay so bad that most people still have trouble understanding him and his sentence structure is a nightmare! But he's a funloving, easy going kid who only wants to make people happy. The point is: autism has more faces than you could ever imagine. Get a neuropsyche done by a neuropsychologist and keep your mind open to different diagnosis. It could be a "mind-blowing" experience and could possibly change the way things are done! Good luck! Beth [/QUOTE]
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