Author Topic: loving spoiled special needs kids  (Read 25225 times)

i was a percussionist for the 6th grade band, and one day after we had a practice i put the base drum away. the other percussionist (a kid with autism) ran up behind me when i was tying my shoe and, i stuff you not, slammed my head in between two crash symbols, which left 2-3 big cuts on the sides of my head and made one of my ears ring for about a week. and i got in trouble for the incident because "he liked the base drum more" and i almost got suspended. i loving hate this stuff.

i was a percussionist for the 6th grade band, and one day after we had a practice i put the base drum away. the other percussionist (a kid with autism) ran up behind me when i was tying my shoe and, i stuff you not, slammed my head in between two crash symbols, which left 2-3 big cuts on the sides of my head and made one of my ears ring for about a week. and i got in trouble for the incident because "he liked the base drum more" and i almost got suspended. i loving hate this stuff.
I kind of doubt this is 100% true

I kind of doubt this is 100% true
I can vouch for that, actually a similar incident happened with my Annoying Orangeet. A kid with downs was 23rd chair, and he came up to my 3rd. Sat on it, took my Annoying Orangeet and crushed the bell by stepping on it. "Oops" does not cut it.

Your schools are stuff. Mine actually puts the kids with problems in separate classes entirely. Gym an exception, but they are always on the opposite end of the room.

The only problem is some chick that is incredibly annoying. Say, if the phone rings during class, as if it wasn't obvious, she'll literally repeat "phone" until the teacher picks it up. Luckily, I wasn't set with any classes with her this year. Still, she makes a show at lunch, telling on literally anybody giving her a look she doesn't like. I've heard rumors that she has social problems and all that, and tbh, it's probably true. She groped a kids balls and the teachers could care less.

Your schools are stuff. Mine actually puts the kids with problems in separate classes entirely. Gym an exception, but they are always on the opposite end of the room.
and I thought I was the only one
The only problem is some chick that is incredibly annoying. Say, if the phone rings during class, as if it wasn't obvious, she'll literally repeat "phone" until the teacher picks it up.
That isnt even the worst that I've seen. This one girl in my school would always eat her like baby food or whatever substance they shove down her throught and it looks like a liquid food. She would end up throwing it at other people at other lunch tables and nobody could even do anything about it since shes special needs and if they told on her she wouldn't even get yelled at or anything.
This happened at my old old school back in elementary. She did it for years and got away with it even when people told the principle on her
i was a percussionist for the 6th grade band, and one day after we had a practice i put the base drum away. the other percussionist (a kid with autism) ran up behind me when i was tying my shoe and, i stuff you not, slammed my head in between two crash symbols, which left 2-3 big cuts on the sides of my head and made one of my ears ring for about a week. and i got in trouble for the incident because "he liked the base drum more" and i almost got suspended. i loving hate this stuff.
My brother walked off from me when I was in a mall and me and my dad ended up calling the police to search for him, we found him like 3 hours later but yeah.
my school seems pretty reasonable about the special needies and only one of them is actually aggressively annoying
They cant really help it. I wouldnt think its easy to avoid them but I just got used to it for having someone in my family be special needs
Transgender and handicapped and feminist just doesn't work out well, s/he tries to argue with people and you can hear that s/he is just mimicking what other people have said because it's like completely unrelated arguments strung together.
I knew some kid at my old school who would repeat the instructions that people gave him and then the kids ended up teaching him how to swear in front of teachers. I had another kid that goes to my current school that people taunt him to swear and do other things because they think they are so funny for it or some stuff

I had to deal with going to a special Olympics for years and watching autistic people throw baseballs two feet.
« Last Edit: December 08, 2013, 11:43:11 AM by Nal »

I kind of doubt this is 100% true
I really wouldn't be suprised if it was

I really wouldn't be suprised if it was
I just mean the part about him getting in trouble

like this one kid named will is an EXTREME war addict, he goes around the class pretending like hes shooting guns and rockets and slicing zombies heads off
he just acts like a total handicap
Yea, one of my "friends" (and by friend I mean guy who just sits down beside me and my friends at lunch and acts like hes my friend even though hes a total richard to me and a butt buddy to some guy) does this sometimes too.

It's not the parents, it's society lol. People (schools/special needs teachers) think that special kids should have no boundaries as to what they can do because they "can't help it." I can't tell you how many times I've asked a handicapped kid to stop doing something really annoying during class and have received incredibly dirty looks by their aides. I've also had huge arguments with dumbass special needs teachers about the word handicapped because they think it's a curse word or something.

The school suspended a girl for saying no to going on a date? What
That can't be legal, why didn't someone sue them or something?

The school suspended a girl for saying no to going on a date? What
That can't be legal, why didn't someone sue them or something?
because there is no law in the land of imagination

One time my brother insisted that a kid who was allergic to peanut butter should eat a peanut butter sandwich then shoved it in his face
He was gonna get suspended but he has Aspergers so he didn't l0l


Your schools are stuff. Mine actually puts the kids with problems in separate classes entirely. Gym an exception, but they are always on the opposite end of the room.

I think that some special kids who are a threat to other children should be isolated from them, they are a threat to other kids. Teachers give these kids what they want because they are scared of many of them. I am special ed, but I am grateful that I have no mental issues/psychological problems.