There are more “bad” days than “good” ones.
Our 13-year-old son was adopted at the age of 4 weeks old. We knew he had been exposed to alcohol throughout the entire pregnancy, but we were optimistically hopeful that he would escape the effects of alcohol. He was diagnosed with static encephalopathy alcohol exposed (which falls under the fetal alcohol spectrum disorder umbrella) at age 2 and a half. This is our story. ~ Renee
Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder can manifest itself in a variety of ways, person to person. At its core, it is permanent brain damage caused by prenatal alcohol exposure. Here is a just a small taste of what we deal with on a daily basis.
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Imagine:
Telling your child he can’t have a granola bar. This sets off a four-hour rage that ends only when he throws a rock hard enough at the van to shatter the back windshield. Child doesn’t understand why you’re upset. It’s not his fault. He didn’t mean to break the window…just throw rocks at it. Child never “owns up” to breaking the window because he truly sees it as an accident. He cannot see that he caused the broken window.
Top Comments
This was a really interesting read. I don't really know much about FASD, all I've ever heard is not to drink while pregnant. I never really knew what the results were.