By ANDREW WHITEHOUSE
There are few experiences more life-changing than having a child.
Nine months of anticipation are followed by hours of intense excitement, until a squawk and a squeal signal the beginning of a new life – for all of you. There, in front of you, lies a human being, who not only you have made (!), but who you will nurture, support and love through the most vulnerable times of their life.
This is why having a child with developmental problems is so gut-wrenching. Parents imagine the potential distress that their beloved child may experience, and often the hopes and dreams that all parents implicitly have for their child (happiness, health, grandchildren), and even those they had for themselves, need to be re-written. Guilt, heart-ache, and grief.
This is a common tale in my own particular area of research interest, autism, but could easily apply to other developmental conditions such as Downs Syndrome, ADHD and language disorders.
These tales drill down to the core of the human condition and touch people so personally that many are desperate to help.
This passion is clear to see in the sheer volume of theories about what causes children to develop differently, and what can be done to help them reach their full potential.
Taking autism as an example, there exists theories that vaccines, wi-fi, electronic media, and milk, cause the disorder. We also have people claiming that diet changes, bowel bleaching, and homeopathy can ‘cure’ the condition.
Top Comments
Thank you Andrew for writing such a good message into an article.
There is so much crap about vaccines and autism and other disorders.
For the commenters stating "Autism has skyrocketed" it hasn't. Awareness has. More people are being diagnosed with autism, not more people getting it. Autism isn't something you can contract like hepatitis or a cold, it's something you're born with, like the colour of your skin.
I have Asperger's and ADHD, I am also classed as 'gifted', I am seventeen.
THis means I am like any other person, I just talk exceptionally fast, switch subjects in a sentence five times and find that I can be quite socially awkward.
I was diagnosed all three last year. The reason it took so long is that there were people telling my parents no it's normal, she's just acting up. After my brother was diagnosed my mother decided that I should be tested as well. The fantastic psychologist who is the best in our region on Autism and related spectrums who diagnosed my brother agreed and tested me for absolutely everything she could think of.
The boys have it more than girls statement is wrong. Girls cover it up more and act like other girls more in my case anyway, and from what I've experienced.
For those who are going to jump all over this comment and tell me I should try an appealing food diet I have this to say.
"Do you know what they call "alternative medicine" that's been proved to work? Medicine."
Mr Whitehouse. It is abundantly clear that you do not live with an autistic person let alone have given birth to one. The Americans will undoubtedly find a cure for autism one day as a result of your reckless theories. If you had a child who was severely autistic and not just thought it may be an interesting job you might thank those doctors in the US who are going out on a limb to try to work out what might help and allow parents to access the information before it had gone through multiple steps. What a pompous turd you are!!!!
Now if that's not the pot calling the kettle black I don't know what is!
I know how you feel, very frustrating