Community Tard Baby General (includes brain dead kids) - Fundies and their genetic Fuckups; Parents of corpses in denial

I doubt she consciously chose to kill her child one day rather than give him up. Not that it would absolve her, but she might have just snapped and done it impulsively without much thought. It doesn't sound like she even tried to hide it.
Do your hardest to imagine spending 24 hours a day, locked in a house for four to five months straight with a tard that can't do anything but kick and scream at the top of his lungs, the likes of which you can't get reprieve from because it resonates through the entire house. Sounds like something the CIA would do to Al Qaeda. Sound torture is a legitimate psychological tactic.
 
Do your hardest to imagine spending 24 hours a day, locked in a house for four to five months straight with a tard that can't do anything but kick and scream at the top of his lungs, the likes of which you can't get reprieve from because it resonates through the entire house. Sounds like something the CIA would do to Al Qaeda. Sound torture is a legitimate psychological tactic.
Sounds like a boomer joke about marriage.
 
Do your hardest to imagine spending 24 hours a day, locked in a house for four to five months straight with a tard that can't do anything but kick and scream at the top of his lungs, the likes of which you can't get reprieve from because it resonates through the entire house. Sounds like something the CIA would do to Al Qaeda. Sound torture is a legitimate psychological tactic.

Living with a special needs child or adult is never easy. However (and since I've PL-ed in this thread a hundred times, I'll just keep on doing it), I firmly believe it's all in how you raise the child. Get them the proper therapies, teach them boundaries, even given them consequences. Regardless of how 'low' the child is, even a brief consequence, like taking a favorite toy away for a minute after they do something they aren't suppose to will eventually teach them. It's a long, sometimes years long, process and sometimes you have to re-teach, but it's really the only way to ensure some sort of order. Aside from putting them in an institution & throwing away the key.

I've worked with students who absolutely wreck a classroom...like rock star on a bender wreck. The first time I saw this happen, my natural reaction was to attempt to stop the child, but the teacher I was with put his arm out & told me not to, he wants that reaction. Instead, I got the other (special education) children out of the classroom, took them out to the playground & we played a game while the teacher and administrator let that kid wreck the room. When he didn't get a reaction, he stopped. When I got the radio call for the class to come back inside, the teacher was using hand-over-hand to make that student clean up his mess. He was crying and saying "I sorry, I sorry," but he still had to clean up. He threw a fit like that maybe once more, but once he figured out he wasn't getting the attention and had to do the clean up, he stopped.

I realize it's very different when it's your home. My sister (with the severely Autistic son) has a friend who's son (also Autistic), who loves to take the lid off the toilet tank & smash it on the ground until it breaks. As a result, none of their toilet tanks can have lids on them . I know parents who cannot have anything on the walls of their homes, nothing heavy or breakable on the tables because they live in fear of their child and her tantrums. Their home looks like very bare doctor's office. It's so sad. In my opinion, they didn't teach their child (who is now 17) what was acceptable or discipline her when she was younger. But that's just that---my opinion.

In regards to Autistic kids being drawn towards water, my nephew lives up to his zodiac sign of Aquarius. He loves the water, has ever since he was a baby. So you know what my sister did? Got him swimming lessons so he wouldn't drown. If you call any place that offers swimming lessons and explain that you have a child who loves the water, but has special needs, there's usually a program for them or an instructor willing to take them on. My nephew started when he was 3 and by 7, he could jump off the edge of the pool in the deep end & get to the edge of the pool on his own. One skill he had to master was dead man's float, just because it can save you if you can't tread water. Will he survive a shipwreck? Probably not, but then again, most people who aren't strong swimmers won't. But he can have fun in the water & be safe.
 
Living with a special needs child or adult is never easy. However (and since I've PL-ed in this thread a hundred times, I'll just keep on doing it), I firmly believe it's all in how you raise the child. Get them the proper therapies, teach them boundaries, even given them consequences. Regardless of how 'low' the child is, even a brief consequence, like taking a favorite toy away for a minute after they do something they aren't suppose to will eventually teach them. It's a long, sometimes years long, process and sometimes you have to re-teach, but it's really the only way to ensure some sort of order. Aside from putting them in an institution & throwing away the key.

I've worked with students who absolutely wreck a classroom...like rock star on a bender wreck. The first time I saw this happen, my natural reaction was to attempt to stop the child, but the teacher I was with put his arm out & told me not to, he wants that reaction. Instead, I got the other (special education) children out of the classroom, took them out to the playground & we played a game while the teacher and administrator let that kid wreck the room. When he didn't get a reaction, he stopped. When I got the radio call for the class to come back inside, the teacher was using hand-over-hand to make that student clean up his mess. He was crying and saying "I sorry, I sorry," but he still had to clean up. He threw a fit like that maybe once more, but once he figured out he wasn't getting the attention and had to do the clean up, he stopped.

I realize it's very different when it's your home. My sister (with the severely Autistic son) has a friend who's son (also Autistic), who loves to take the lid off the toilet tank & smash it on the ground until it breaks. As a result, none of their toilet tanks can have lids on them . I know parents who cannot have anything on the walls of their homes, nothing heavy or breakable on the tables because they live in fear of their child and her tantrums. Their home looks like very bare doctor's office. It's so sad. In my opinion, they didn't teach their child (who is now 17) what was acceptable or discipline her when she was younger. But that's just that---my opinion.

In regards to Autistic kids being drawn towards water, my nephew lives up to his zodiac sign of Aquarius. He loves the water, has ever since he was a baby. So you know what my sister did? Got him swimming lessons so he wouldn't drown. If you call any place that offers swimming lessons and explain that you have a child who loves the water, but has special needs, there's usually a program for them or an instructor willing to take them on. My nephew started when he was 3 and by 7, he could jump off the edge of the pool in the deep end & get to the edge of the pool on his own. One skill he had to master was dead man's float, just because it can save you if you can't tread water. Will he survive a shipwreck? Probably not, but then again, most people who aren't strong swimmers won't. But he can have fun in the water & be safe.

The parents of the kid I knew who would throw themselves at water did this. Kid could swim, after a fashion, and enjoyed themselves greatly. It still didn't mean they could be off the leash/ out if the chair in public anywhere bear water because there's a difference between a safe warm clear swimming pool and a thrashing, stormy sea in winter, or a deep, dark cold canal filled with thick weeds and debris or a bay with sinking sands. Kid would run at any water no matter how unsurviveable or unsafe the conditions. If you fall in the sea around our area in winter you're dead from hypothermia in a short few minutes or from being beaten by huge gale force driven waves against the sea wall, or will be swept out to sea and never found again depending on the tide. Grown adults die regularly in the sea where I live even in summer when the misjudge the conditions or their own abilities. Swimming lessons are great but don't solve the problem of the kid having zero sense of personal safety. Water poses dangers no matter who you are or how well you can swim, but most people have the cognitive ability to understand at least some of the dangers and avoid them. This kid had none and would scream to go in anything from a safe warm pool to flood water to a angry freezing winter sea.

As for training the tard, depends on their ability to learn and there csn be conditions where cognitive or behavioral decline sets in due to various factors beyond parental control. Classroom and home are different. Burgeoning sex hormones can cause an increase in aggression and the kid can simply grow too huge to wrangle during physical rages, outweighing the mother by a large amount. Ever seen Katie Price with Harvey? She's like 110lb and 5'2 to her son's 350lb of angry autistic, prada-willi with multiple other disabilities 6ft plus tard. No wonder she drinks.
 
In my experience, kids on all levels of disability acting up was 9/10 times due to being mistreated or experiencing something else unpleasant they couldn't deal with. I think a lot of people just see that shit and think tards being tards or that it's just the kid misbehaving to misbehave, but in most cases I guarentee theres something else going on. Unfortunately they don't want to try and figure out what's causing the problem, because that takes work (and also possibly means acknowledging you've done something shitty).

There's this mentality people have that kids with behavior issues are just problems, when in reality the kid is almost always just a symptom of much larger problem. Disabled kids are no exception, and are also at higher risk of abuse than non-disabled kids.
 
In my experience, kids on all levels of disability acting up was 9/10 times due to being mistreated or experiencing something else unpleasant they couldn't deal with. I think a lot of people just see that shit and think tards being tards or that it's just the kid misbehaving to misbehave, but in most cases I guarentee theres something else going on. Unfortunately they don't want to try and figure out what's causing the problem, because that takes work (and also possibly means acknowledging you've done something shitty).

There's this mentality people have that kids with behavior issues are just problems, when in reality the kid is almost always just a symptom of much larger problem. Disabled kids are no exception, and are also at higher risk of abuse than non-disabled kids.

We have a saying in Special Education : "Behavior is Communication" .
 
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In my experience, kids on all levels of disability acting up was 9/10 times due to being mistreated or experiencing something else unpleasant they couldn't deal with. I think a lot of people just see that shit and think tards being tards or that it's just the kid misbehaving to misbehave, but in most cases I guarentee theres something else going on. Unfortunately they don't want to try and figure out what's causing the problem, because that takes work (and also possibly means acknowledging you've done something shitty).

There's this mentality people have that kids with behavior issues are just problems, when in reality the kid is almost always just a symptom of much larger problem. Disabled kids are no exception, and are also at higher risk of abuse than non-disabled kids.

Yup, and abuse can make shit a lot worse than it ever should've been. Same with bad therapy. But good luck accessing proper professionals for any kid anywhere in the world. As noted in this kid's case, the mother had no support. The kid should've still had ongoing therapy. I doubt he was even getting any.
 
We have a saying in Special Education : "Behavior is Communication" .
Exactly. More often then not escalating behavior is due to frustration of their "communincation" not being understood. OR due to rewarding the misbehavior, can't count the amount of times mothers have said hes so bad in the store and the only way to stop it is to buy him a candy bar and give it to him there. Of course the kids acting up hes gonna get himself candy if he does!
 
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Yup, and abuse can make shit a lot worse than it ever should've been. Same with bad therapy. But good luck accessing proper professionals for any kid anywhere in the world. As noted in this kid's case, the mother had no support. The kid should've still had ongoing therapy. I doubt he was even getting any.

Nobody's had anything since March due to mass government and systemic hysteria about le coof. Cancer patients have had treatment stopped because apparently it's better to have your cancer progress and metastisize than risk catching covid. I suspect the public health impact of covid over time will be far greater than the impact of actual covid itself given access to doctors and hospitals and treatments and normal preventative healthcare has been basically reduced to little more than acute emergency stuff for half a year and for God knows how much longer. Basically fuck the millions of people with all other ongoing health needs. Pure insanity.
 
The loss of any loved one is hard, and finding out that a baby you want and are carrying has failed to develop a brain and will die is no exception. But this anencephaly group is above and beyond normal grieving, and even grotesque. It feels just outright...sarcastic. Those photos of that barely a fetus in that little knitted bed thing, Blue Death and the Seven Dwarfs, the "Happy zero birthdays ever" thing.... It genuinely feels like they're sarcastic takes at a tragic end to a wanted pregnancy, and yet they're not. And worse, they get praised for mocking the miscarriages and still births of their dead, brainless fetuses.

That picture of the dead baby with the zero-birthday cake was just warped. NILMDTS, I understand. Something like that, I don't, and am glad I don't.


I've thought this too. There seems to be a self-extinguishing instinct built into individuals with certain conditions and the reptile part of my mind wonders if it's just nature finding a way, so to speak. It's the kind of thought people don't like, especially when it comes o kids, so I rarely express it in company.

I saw a case in the US recently where an autistic three year-old somehow escaped from his apartment one evening and was missing for a week or so. Apparently he was another 'obsessed with water' and there was a river right next to the complex. Guess where they found his body eventually? Yep. Lots of kids are fascinated by water but it seems some are compelled to annihilate themselves in it from the moment they can walk. weirdly fascinating.

If y'all want to contact Dylan Freeman's sperm donor, you can do it from here.


I've heard a multitude of stories about people who have had strokes, or are in late-stage Alzheimer's, who keep pulling out their feeding tubes, and the family insists that they be replaced. Um, hello, you don't think the person is trying to tell you something?
 
Hm. Maybe that explains why this Mom tried to kill her son by pushing him in the water.


She tried not once, but twice before succeeding and there's footage.
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Apparently the race of two random people she tried to pin the murder on matters more than a autistic child dying, though.
 
If y'all want to contact Dylan Freeman's sperm donor, you can do it from here.


CoughWEARENOTANAUTISTICILLUMNATIcough. <--- forum guidelines

No wish to taunt anyone. He's probably rethinking his whole life right now and needs no assistance from anyone to feel like a piece of shit.

I do note his bio says he 'divides his time between Barcelona, London and Los Angeles. Worse than I thought. Guy's of even less use in LA than he would be in Spain. The time difference alone. Ugh.

I've heard a multitude of stories about people who have had strokes, or are in late-stage Alzheimer's, who keep pulling out their feeding tubes, and the family insists that they be replaced. Um, hello, you don't think the person is trying to tell you something?

Yeah, they are. It's a cruel disease and a cruel death. The suffering is immense. Any moment of clarity would be truly horrifying and I'd want out too.
 
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I just got a really angry letter asking why we're not using end-of-life doulas as part of our practice, which I didn't even know was a thing.

I guess once you give a baby an anoxic brain injury delivering him you can step right in to provide end-of-life care. The circle of life is complete.
birth doulas are mostly good in my book, most of them simply do their best to support whatever choice the mother makes without trying to sway her either way. the worst ones will interfere with patients accepting medical advice, but that is specifically something they are trained not to do (though a lot of them never get training). they know they aren't medical professionals and only help provide comfort the way an ordinary person can. Some of them believe in homeopathy and other bullshit, but for the most part they use things that seem to work better than placebo (counter pressure during contractions, or breathing in ginger or peppermint aromatherapy to try and counteract nausea, that type of shit). I have heard of post partum doulas too, who mostly do things like clean your kitchen or let you take a nap or a shower, maybe they rub your back if you want, talk about what things are like with a newborn, etc. End of life doulas provide a lot of the same comfort tactics for people who are dying, and focus on providing comfort and dignity. I don't think its a bad idea if they aren't ideologically driven.
 
Nobody's had anything since March due to mass government and systemic hysteria about le coof. Cancer patients have had treatment stopped because apparently it's better to have your cancer progress and metastisize than risk catching covid. I suspect the public health impact of covid over time will be far greater than the impact of actual covid itself given access to doctors and hospitals and treatments and normal preventative healthcare has been basically reduced to little more than acute emergency stuff for half a year and for God knows how much longer. Basically fuck the millions of people with all other ongoing health needs. Pure insanity.
cancer patients are extremely high risk.
They're still running chemo, scans and things like that- but anything that could land them in ICU is a no-go for now. those wards are a guaranteed coof.

I just got a really angry letter asking why we're not using end-of-life doulas as part of our practice, which I didn't even know was a thing.

I guess once you give a baby an anoxic brain injury delivering him you can step right in to provide end-of-life care. The circle of life is complete.

end of life doulas are meant to be part of hospice- it's some kind of hippie shit as in "help them be un-born" or whatever, move into the next plane of existence and accept death. it would do nothing at all for someone who isn't aware they're alive
 
end of life doulas are meant to be part of hospice- it's some kind of hippie shit as in "help them be un-born" or whatever, move into the next plane of existence and accept death. it would do nothing at all for someone who isn't aware they're alive

Well at least their patients are already dying so there's not more they can fuck up there.

That's also what we use Hospice volunteers for. They perform a very important role for both patients and families and also you...don't have to pay them.
 
So I've gone through most of the anencephaly group at this point. I had to take a break as I could feel myself becoming mentally ill just scrolling through it.

Above all, it shocks me how delusional everyone in the group is. Even the most fucked up brainless fetus is "cute", "beautiful"

Here's an insane Brazilian woman and her....I don't even know.

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Here's a woman that dresses up her tard baby's fucking URN as a mermaid
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Santa hat on a fucking urn
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Urn with easter eggs

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USA USA USA
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So I've gone through most of the anencephaly group at this point. I had to take a break as I could feel myself becoming mentally ill just scrolling through it.

Above all, it shocks me how delusional everyone in the group is. Even the most fucked up brainless fetus is "cute", "beautiful"

Here's an insane Brazilian woman and her....I don't even know.




This is some Joel-Peter Witkin-level photography. It just needs to be high contrast, scratchy black and white.
Screenshot_20200820-215357.pngJoel-Peter-Witkin-Anna-Akhmatova-Paris-via-photography-in.berlin.jpg
Witkin for reference
 
So I've gone through most of the anencephaly group at this point. I had to take a break as I could feel myself becoming mentally ill just scrolling through it.

Above all, it shocks me how delusional everyone in the group is. Even the most fucked up brainless fetus is "cute", "beautiful"

Here's an insane Brazilian woman and her....I don't even know.




Here's a woman that dresses up her tard baby's fucking URN as a mermaid
View attachment 1535804
Santa hat on a fucking urn
View attachment 1535769

Urn with easter eggs

View attachment 1535771

USA USA USA
View attachment 1535830
Gotta be patriotic even after death! 'Murica!
In seriousness, jesus fucking christ, let that poor thing go. I'm genuinely suprised that baby is still alive (the first set of pictures).
 
Yeah, they are. It's a cruel disease and a cruel death. The suffering is immense. Any moment of clarity would be truly horrifying and I'd want out too.
Talk about fucking selfish. Any sane person would realize that their parent/loved one is essentially gone, start going to counseling or something or start emotionally preparing for the loss, and let them go. It's not their decision to make, you can't let someone continue to suffer because you don't want to grieve even though (with the likes of alzheimer's) you've had a long time to accept what's coming. How unreasonably cruel. When my mom put the dog down because he was filled with tumors she lamented the fact that she felt he probably should have been euthanized earlier (poor boy tried his best to act like he wasn't in pain, though...) and it honestly disgusts me that we give more mercy to dogs than to our own mothers/fathers/grandparents...
So I've gone through most of the anencephaly group at this point. I had to take a break as I could feel myself becoming mentally ill just scrolling through it.

Above all, it shocks me how delusional everyone in the group is. Even the most fucked up brainless fetus is "cute", "beautiful"

Here's an insane Brazilian woman and her....I don't even know.




Here's a woman that dresses up her tard baby's fucking URN as a mermaid
View attachment 1535804
Santa hat on a fucking urn
View attachment 1535769

Urn with easter eggs

View attachment 1535771

USA USA USA
View attachment 1535830
... I started giggling after awhile over just how blackly comedic this is, but yeah this is super fucked. Whatever happened to due to the dead or respect for the dead? I'd garner you didn't care for your daughter much at all if even in death you can't give her any goddamn peace from being your puppet. Put the urn on the mantle permanently or bury her in the backyard or something, goddamn.
 
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