I hope that you are able to trust people again, Lenco. There are still good and decent people out there who are understanding and supportive of people with ASD. People who don't judge because there is nothing to judge. Those who judge will always be inferior human beings even if they are classed as "neurotypical". What is neurotypical anyway?
I do trust those in my own circle, such as the staff at my day centre, all of whom are lovely caring people who treat us with respect and sympathy and don't treat us like crap, unlike a couple of blokes who worked at my previous day centre, both of whom had very old-school confrontational, masculine 'hard-man' attitudes, and were very pro-zero tolerance and had a habit of 'chastise first, think about it later', and both were very pro-trade unionism with militant tendencies.
Typical Bobby Grant types!
Things are better for you now. People in our past can haunt us or can be put in the "finished" box.
Can't the same be said for all institutions and homes? Disabled people were treated badly, kids were treated badly, women, etc. But things have moved on. Checks are tighter helping to keep out those with bad attitudes.
So, having a good relationship now is what matters most, is more relevant those the ignorance of the past.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For free Mindfulness resources, please see this thread I have created to compile many sources together http://www.nomorepanic.co.uk/showthread.php?t=168689
I agree things have mostly improved nowadays.
But surely we'll still always get the odd cunning, conniving barstewards who slip through the net, especially where there are other motives/agendas involved, such as secret relationships/ affairs between such dodgy staff members and managers, and even the odd backhanders!
There will always be the typical 'they have every right to a job' argument.
As much as it pains me to see mass unemployment and people on the scrapheap in general, jobs have to be earned, and not abused by such unscrupulous barstewards, especially for the sake of their 'human rights'!
Whilst it probably doesn't get brought up in everyday conversation these days, it still remains as pertinent 25 years on, as (for better or worse) school premises are increasingly fortified, plus fears of 'paedogeddon' have probably never been any more prevalent than they are today!
Same for many day centres for adults with disabilities, especially in the more deprived areas.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)