What is Chris' maximum potential

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timtommy

I am a damn Smoker!
kiwifarms.net
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Sep 16, 2013
I am curious what people think about what could Chris have achieved if things were different, with out changing too much about him. Also, what needed to be different for it to happen.

My answer:

As he is finishing PVCC, Bob decides it is really important that he gets a legitimate job. Bob is able to find him a job that is not too physically or mentally draining, and doesn't require a lot of customer service. Maybe sorting mail or something.

For Chris to keep the job would require a boss who was patient with his eccentricities and Bob riding him hard and not letting him quit. But after a while, this job becomes a comfortable routine for him. He develops a lot of brand loyalty and inordinate pride in the company he works for and his job becomes a large part of how he sees himself. He gets set in his ways, and doesn't really have the motivation to quit or seek promotion. He is able to earn a steady lower-middle class paycheck. He is viewed as a bit of a weirdo by his coworkers, but most tolerate him and a few act like his gal-pals in high school and take turns eating lunch with him.

Through his parents or church he gets involved with a support group for adults with learning disabilities. After initial revulsion, he finds a group of people who share his child-like interests. He is able to build up network of friends to play vidya, lego, and attend conventions with. One of the group is willing to call herself "his girlfriend". Neither of them really understands what that means emotionally, but they walk around holding hands and occasionally make an attempt at sex.

After Bob dies, Barb realizes that she is not physically or emotionally capable of taking care of the house, herself and Chris at the same time. They sell the house and use the proceeds and Chris' paycheque so she can move in to a retirement home. Chris gets a small apartment on his own or with some of his support group, and Barb arranges for a caretaker to look in on Chris 2 or 3 times a week to make sure everything is ok.

Every Saturday morning, Chris picks Barb up at the retirement home, and takes her out to iHop for breakfast.

I do realize this is a bit of a stretch
 
This requires Borb to be good parents. This is more of a what if scenario.
 
Chris's maximum potential: ballast on a crab fishing boat.
 
High school was Chris' maximum potential, and it still wasn't that great. Don' tell me college was, because anyone with enough determination can get through community college, and it took him 6 years to get an associates. In high school, Chris was social, in a regular routine, not obese, even interacting with men in a positive way. That was his best, and he will never repeat it.
 
He can still probably hit 50 and not have to lose an extremity to diabetes, much more have a heart attack.
 
The sad thing is Chris has reached his maximum potential. For him to have done better would have required a better situation. Even with that it's still up in the air. At a previous job we had a guy with Autism come in all the time and he was alot like Chris. High functioning, could drive, but he was still pretty creepy and sexually harrased my employee's. I spoke with his mother after I asked him to leave one time for showing porn to one of the girls. He had all the therepy special school and such but still behaved like a creep. Some autistics have sociopatchic tendancies. They understand what they are doing is not appropriate but just don't care. Chris I think is one of those kinds. It's probably best he is becoming a shut in while :snorlax: is alive she can keep him on a short leash. Once she moves on to cwcville in the sky Chris will probably be put in an institution. On his own I think he would flip out and become a danger to himself and others.


Sorry if that's :alog:
 
Well,
Looked at from a biology POV, his flesh contains enough calories* to burn for several hours if you liberate all the chemical energy in it.



*(~850,646 calories for a 212lb mass of Lard)
 
As he is now he'd be lucky to stay out of jail and keep from being homeless. If he could learn to keep his mouth shut, not act aggressively to people and control his :briefs: and other hygiene problems, he could probably get a part-time job at Goodwill or some other place with job coaches that deal with Chris-like people.

If he learned to cope with his autism and had a work ethic, he could probably get a job as a CAD technician or majored in another community college field and get a job and have a normal life away from Barb and the hoard.
 
I think better parenting would have needed to start a lot earlier. Perhaps not as far as taking Chris out of public school, but getting him a tutor who understands special needs students or setting up appointments with someone who can teach him how to best manage his disabilities would have helped. Whatever Chris's maximum potential, he failed to reach it. Now he's so far gone that he probably never will.
 
His maximum potential is smaller than the lenght of his duck... oh wait, you weren't talking about "that" kind of potential? huh... well, it's basically the same thing...
 
LordCustos3 said:
Well,
Looked at from a biology POV, his flesh contains enough calories* to burn for several hours if you liberate all the chemical energy in it.



*(~850,646 calories for a 212lb mass of Lard)

If Chrissy weighs 212# then I'm Anita Bryant.

:tomgirl:
 
Well depends on how you define what maximum potential means. I could say he could be a great twerker. Well, I can't believe I just mentioned that but I could see him being his own twerk team.
 
I'm not sure of the intention of this question. Chris has reached his maximum potential - his potential was always to fail. Without that, he simply wouldn't be Chris.
 
If Chris had completely different parents, he would have got the proper care for people like him, and live a life that is at least marginally better than the life he has now.

Of course, if that was the situation, Chris would not be the Christian Ricardo Weston Chandler we all love and hate.
 
Chris' maximum potential is precisely equal to the amount of effort other people are willing to put into doing things for him.
 
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