Autism | 1960s Assessment and Treatment.

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Mental Health Treatment

Mental Health Treatment

3 жыл бұрын

Film shows an example of what was once called symbiotic psychosis, and falls under the ASD umbrella today. In this film we see a Freudian approach to the condition, with mention of Mike's "orally destructive impulses" and a treatment goal of "ego differentiation". 1960s were the time of divergence from the psychoanalytic theories that characterized the prior 80 years.

Пікірлер: 228
@lyndsayw5843
@lyndsayw5843 3 жыл бұрын
He's so adorable. I wish that he had the opportunities and support he would get today. It's clear he's very smart.
@lyndsayw5843
@lyndsayw5843 3 жыл бұрын
@@JO-ut9ko I feel very sorry for you.
@Atleastihavemydog
@Atleastihavemydog 2 жыл бұрын
From experience he might not.
@lyndsayw5843
@lyndsayw5843 2 жыл бұрын
@@Atleastihavemydog Sadly that's true. It depends on where you are.
@Atleastihavemydog
@Atleastihavemydog 2 жыл бұрын
@@lyndsayw5843 Small town, large hospital and yet they’ve still failed me. Got an off the record diagnosis from a psychiatrist and doctor who are from out of state.
@andrewmorton395
@andrewmorton395 2 жыл бұрын
In meny places, there still no help any support, Autistics children and adults
@susansaunders249
@susansaunders249 11 ай бұрын
Poor kid. Being told that he's scared and dangerous. I am autistic and was also told all sorts of untrue things. It's sad.
@tanyadodson6847
@tanyadodson6847 10 ай бұрын
my son is autistic bless you ❤
@nautilusnotasquid
@nautilusnotasquid 9 ай бұрын
Yes, I find it enraging that the adult here said “you see it and your first thought is to rip it” how would anyone know what he was thinking?
@cowgirl3144
@cowgirl3144 3 ай бұрын
​@nautilusnotasquid totally!!!! Putting thoughts into his head!!!!???? Wtf??😮 The boy is very smart, curious, and I see that he wants someone to care/ support him. I hate labels, but he MIGHT be adhd, but, I cannot label him.
@we8608
@we8608 2 ай бұрын
You're not though
@Stinkydinky-qn9ky
@Stinkydinky-qn9ky 2 ай бұрын
My ten year old touches everything
@mew853
@mew853 2 жыл бұрын
I watched a documentary and basically in those days 50s n 60s they pretty much blamed the mother's for not bonding well with their child with autism.. often times doctors would look to see what was wrong with the mother and not necessarily the child.. in some places if I remember correctly they even took the child away from his parents.. that's so sad !
@REGjr
@REGjr Жыл бұрын
The genome's been sequenced for a dozen years. Yet they're still looking for the autism gene like OJ's still looking for the real killer. So the answer is behavioral heritability within families. Which means of course it's the mother and everybody's known that since the 50s. Duh
@glowinggoals111
@glowinggoals111 11 ай бұрын
It's scary. If they do this because in this situation child needs his parents rather than anyone else. And we should give kids options if they want to do something they like. You can't just make them tod I things according to your will ..
@tanyadodson6847
@tanyadodson6847 10 ай бұрын
my son is autistic if that happened to me and there took him away from me it would had destroy me 😢😢
@glowinggoals111
@glowinggoals111 10 ай бұрын
Yeah u r right. I got kids and they are normal. We share very strong bonding. They just want me no one else. It's really sad if they do this my heart cries for the mother and kid as well. This can be a trauma for kids as well. And no one take the place of your parents. No one can love u the way mother loves her child and know the needs of kids. I think for them it just might be a experiment. But they do not know they are taking someone's life
@miketee2444
@miketee2444 9 ай бұрын
I'm curious where you think the cause of autism lies. At 50 yrs old I'm here because as a child I remember no one ever having autism. Since then I've known two adults with children affected. I don't believe it was going undiagnosed as the sole reason. I'm sure it happened but I consider things that have changed since the 70s. Everything from drinks and food coming in plastic containers to other drugs prescribed for a random condition finding it's way into these kids. I truly suspect the pharmaceutical industry knows. I'm no conspiracy theorist but drug companies today have zero interest in curing anything. It's more profitable to keep people sick and big pharma pays the FDA to do whatever they wish. It's corrupted at best and down right sinister is more likely.
@scootermom1791
@scootermom1791 Жыл бұрын
I wanted to yell at the first so-called "teacher" or "psychologist" or whatever he was. Mike was clearly bored and wanted something he COULD do. He didn't have the words to ask, "Okay, so what CAN I do? What CAN I play with?" The instructor should have given Mike suggestions for things he could do. Mike's way of asking for this information was to say "I wanna touch it." Yet, anything he suggested was rejected by the instructor. I'm honestly surprised Mike didn't throw a fit after being told the room was "scary" and being repeatedly told "No you can't..." I would have thrown a fit, and I DON'T have autism! Did the "instructor" just expect this poor child to walk into the room, sit down and do nothing? If so, he should have at least told him that was his expectation instead of letting this young boy try to figure it out on his own. The only thing that may have qualified as an "instruction", so-to-speak, was when the guy said "You're afraid your hands and mouth are going to do bad things all the time, Mike, hmmm?" That's sending the message to Michael that the instructor expected Mike to come into the room and "do bad things," for Pete's sake! And, when Mike wanted to read a book, instead of saying, "that's a great choice," he says "The first thing you think about is tearing it." Ummm, well, maybe not, but if you tell a kid what the kid is thinking about (are you psychic??), then subconsciously, Mike's going to think, "oh, wait, yeah, I'm supposed to tear up the book instead of reading it." I get that this may have been considered common practice from teachers and/or psychologists back then. But I'm really having difficulty understanding how this guy can't put himself in Mike's position for a minute to think about what message he's sending to Mike. I also can't understand how the guy is so dumb he can't figure out that Mike simply wanted something to do or something to play with. I can't believe this guy was even able to get a degree allowing him to work with children. He obviously doesn't understand them enough to help them properly!
@skcoll3086
@skcoll3086 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree with you. What I lack of understanding, wisdom, compassion and loving approach ...
@rosemaryclarke6250
@rosemaryclarke6250 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you as well
@sharonjensen3016
@sharonjensen3016 Жыл бұрын
No change in that area. Medical professionals lack true understanding.
@saraadams1391
@saraadams1391 Жыл бұрын
Facts, what a dimwit.
@mr.pickleperson2389
@mr.pickleperson2389 11 ай бұрын
Ikr!!! And clearly he found it easier to learn about his environment through touch (from what I saw) rather than from auditory descriptions, but still the first person was like 'no, don't touch, just sit here and listen to me describe what you should think of this place' and he clearly had no patience at all!
@JosephCaperton
@JosephCaperton 9 ай бұрын
Autism and ADHD aren't sicknesses. They are what you were born with. I was born with Autism and ADHD. I was disabled that was a slow learner and destroyed things and touch things. I was in Special Ed from pre-school in 2010 through 7th grade in the 2020 school year. I was in 6th grade and at 2nd grade reading level, but managed to improve at least. Now I am a General Ed student in my Sophmore year and has no more symptoms. Now since I am smarter and more intelligent, I can write long essays like I am making this comment. I do sometimes play with certain objects when my ADHD kicks in, but I do manage to control it when I realize it. Anyways, have a good day and good luck.
@richardswink-embodiedsouls
@richardswink-embodiedsouls 9 ай бұрын
Excellent comment. Thank you for your honesty. The only reason they call them mental disorder is because we would rather not follow their orders. Humans were never meant to be controlled and programmed in these abusive controlling ways. I have a playlist on my channel that goes over these things. Best to you
@-cvq
@-cvq 4 ай бұрын
it is
@rahbeeuh
@rahbeeuh 4 ай бұрын
​@@richardswink-embodiedsoulsthey're called disorders because there is a clinically significant disruption in a person's cognition, emotional regulation, or behavior.
@richardswink-embodiedsouls
@richardswink-embodiedsouls 4 ай бұрын
@@rahbeeuh yes due to the toxic environment and societies that we are born into. Everything about these abusive systems is non conducive to biological life. It is not natural to name, number, and catalog humans into slavery systems at birth. It is not natural to inject them with dozens of highly toxic heavy metal and chemical substances by the time they are 5. It is not natural to expect any human to sit still for 8 hours a day and be propagandized with lies and bs from state ran indoctrination centers and be tested daily for compliance. It is not natural to consume highly processed foods all day every day which poison us and have extremely detrimental effects not only on our nervous system and every other system and organ of the body but also cause, sickness, disease, and death. It is not normal for a human to work their whole lives just to be able to keep a roof over their head, the lights on, and toxic “food” in the fridge. Everything that is status quo in these societies we find ourselves enslaved in completely against the natural functioning of our bodies, minds, and what it means to be human. Everything is meant to dumb you down and enslave you. All “mental disorders” are caused by these toxic systems of enslavement we survive in. You are made to be a mindless minion that obeys and pass tests. That is it. You are nothing but a number to the controllers. Just the fact that the modern day school system was designed by Rockefeller with the government to churn out obedient compliant factory workers should be enough to wake even the most brain dead zombie. They modeled them after 1700s Prussia systems that were built to churn out compliant soldiers for their military at 14yo. This is why everything about the “education” system soo closely resembles the prison industrial complex. Government comes from the Latin: Guber - to control Mente - the mind It’s called the American dream because you can only believe it if you are asleep. Most will live and die an obedient compliant slave defending their masters and the systems that abuse and enslaved them to the death. Sad
@clairebell876
@clairebell876 2 ай бұрын
I dunno they sound kinda like sickness you re born with
@Messier45_Pleiades
@Messier45_Pleiades 11 ай бұрын
Back then they blamed the parents, especially the mother, for autism. It was a very sick period in medicine.
@MintyMelxEditz
@MintyMelxEditz 10 ай бұрын
yes and unfortunately a lot of the time it’s still like this, and especially for girls too since we present differently from boys. my mother pulled me from school after failing to get an assessment as every day i kicked, and screamed, and injured her because i could not go to school, it was extremely hard for both of us. they just told her she’s not trying hard enough because i was ‘behaving perfectly at school’ ..everyone’s been much happier since i left public school for home education.
@Mirroxaphene
@Mirroxaphene 10 ай бұрын
I don’t think it was sick; they just didn’t know.
@Messier45_Pleiades
@Messier45_Pleiades 9 ай бұрын
@@Mirroxaphene Perhaps you were not affected by medicine back then. I was a victim of sick abusive pedo medical staff.
@anonymousanonymous4238
@anonymousanonymous4238 8 ай бұрын
I have HFA and I agree that we have come along way as a society in terms of this but not anywhere near where it needs to be.
@Ace96ify
@Ace96ify 6 ай бұрын
You believe in Santa?
@courtneypuzzo2502
@courtneypuzzo2502 11 ай бұрын
unfortunately in the 1960s most disabled people were either forced into residential group homes or not allowed to attend public school. my mom has a cousin who is severely disabled has the mental capacity of a 3 y/o. who the state of MA wanted to be institutionalized and auntie Ruthie totally refused to send Cheryl to one of those state schools for disabled/troubled kids
@amyhyde70
@amyhyde70 2 жыл бұрын
See how the “Dr.” is clearly putting suggestive ideas into his head. Not helpful, but as a way to affirm the Docs beliefs. I hope they have made improvements in helping kids nowadays.
@CrazyWarriorCatLady
@CrazyWarriorCatLady 2 жыл бұрын
Nope
@somethingwithbungalows
@somethingwithbungalows 2 жыл бұрын
@@CrazyWarriorCatLady whatcha mean?
@lsour8546
@lsour8546 2 жыл бұрын
Right? And then the narrator was far more critical of the second therapist for some weird reason
@reddeer1758
@reddeer1758 2 жыл бұрын
The activity with the hammer and nails is pretty clever really. Using gross motor skills can really help someone that experiences big emotions, like a lot of children with autism do.
@laurag7295
@laurag7295 Жыл бұрын
True
@laurag7295
@laurag7295 Жыл бұрын
My son, who has autism, had extremely fine motor skills from a very young age.
@mjkelly9801
@mjkelly9801 3 жыл бұрын
Bet the lady therapist wished they had plastic hammer/nail sets back in the 1960s lol, I'd be scared😱
@tiamarie6719
@tiamarie6719 9 ай бұрын
That's kind of interesting, to see how people with autism were treated back in those days.
@paytonlescalleet9714
@paytonlescalleet9714 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised that man is so nice to him they were usually mean to kids like him in the 60s
@night-streakmedia3319
@night-streakmedia3319 9 ай бұрын
Some people still label autistic people as insane or retarded which is enraging
@thomasdanley7642
@thomasdanley7642 4 ай бұрын
You definitely weren't alive in the 60s. That wasn't that long ago.... Just because the video is in black and white doesn't make these people apes?.... People still were nice to kids
@sliverhalo9286
@sliverhalo9286 3 жыл бұрын
What a gem
@CathyCastro
@CathyCastro 3 жыл бұрын
Very interesting footage.
@nickmay9519
@nickmay9519 2 жыл бұрын
To the monkey bars like my mans said😂😂😂😂
@Domdeone1
@Domdeone1 Ай бұрын
I find myself rocking watching this, brings back memories of child psychologists analysing me. And l am not sadistic or ever will be & yes teachers blamed my Mum.
@An_w-ji4vt
@An_w-ji4vt 3 жыл бұрын
So I just watched a video of a child and people talk about his behaviour.....Lockdown is not good for me
@robforrest9083
@robforrest9083 9 ай бұрын
The poor boy had no toys in the room. The therapist didn't give him an alternative. We have come a long ways with therapy but we still need to develope a medication to treat autism like they have for adhd.
@richardswink-embodiedsouls
@richardswink-embodiedsouls 9 ай бұрын
You are obviously still ignorant to what that medication does. This is a disgusting display of ignorance and abuse on these adults part. That child just wanted to do things his way. These rigorous authoritarians are simply trying to show that due to his insistence on being independent he raises his voice and refuses to comply. All these tyrants want is compliance. Which goes back to the medication. Before you suggest innocent independent souls be put on extremely toxic and brain deadening drugs you should do your due diligence and research what the long term effects of these poisons do. Otherwise you are what is called a useful idiot. Toeing the line for the slave masters who want nothing but obedient mindless groupthinking zombies. I have a playlist on my channel that goes over these things. I would suggest you start researching. If you do you certainly wouldn’t leave such a foolish comment.
@captaincosback323
@captaincosback323 7 ай бұрын
I don't think we should try to eradicate Autism.
@-cvq
@-cvq 4 ай бұрын
@@captaincosback323 whats wrong with you
@captaincosback323
@captaincosback323 4 ай бұрын
@@-cvq As an Autistic person. What's wrong with you? I'm proud to be Autistic.
@-cvq
@-cvq 4 ай бұрын
@@captaincosback323 well im autistic too and it is not fun
@alien2836
@alien2836 3 жыл бұрын
children of people who suffer from that disease as we call it is not a disease for me. It's such behavior that everything you tell him how to do it, he doesn't accept it, he gets angry, but in the end he does it better than anyone properly. and if you accept him, accept him as he is, then he will recover and he won't even need pills in a few months.
@madirodgers9768
@madirodgers9768 3 жыл бұрын
Most people with autism don't take meds anyways...
@eg-draw
@eg-draw 3 жыл бұрын
And this is why situation with these kids become more and more dangerous. Bc there are always ppl saying "oh he isn't sick, he doesn't need any special therapy or medication, just accept him and let him be, blahblahblah. Do that you want and just yell as loud as you can if someone isn't ok with that. Someone or you own get hurt? Oh that's fiiiine, not my problem after all"
@alien2836
@alien2836 3 жыл бұрын
@@gracelilyyoshua328 TO SE LECI SAMO VREMENOM. TO ZNAC VREME I TA OSOBA DPLAZI SEBI PRIHVACENA KAKVA I JESTE. A TAKVI KAO TI U DRUSTVU SU ZA NJIH BOLESNI TO JESTE VI STE BOLESNI NE OSOBE ZA KOJE GOVORITE DA JESU.
@REGjr
@REGjr Жыл бұрын
Yes but the mother to whom that is obvious doesn't cause autism in the first place. ASD is severe anxious attachment. ADHD is severe avoidant attachment. The abandonment of (withdrawal from) self in ADHD responds more reliably to medication than the retreat (withdrawal) into self of ASD because even though both are sequelae of gross emotional neglect the autistic patient's inward-facing boundary porosity hasn't split-off from its unrecognized unidentified unclaimed emotions. Neither has been shown how to self-regulate but as part of his self abandonment the ADHD patient has inadvertently disavowed responsibility for doing so. If an ego had yet formed to decompensate perhaps there'd be some vector of benefit for medicating ASD, but it's already introspection on overdrive.
@zowi197
@zowi197 Жыл бұрын
​@@eg-draw I mean, depends on the commorbilities that autism can come with; by itself it's not as you say, but in some cases, it comes with intellectual disability and in those cases you may be right. For example, take a look at Elon Musk or Mark Zuckerberg, they're both autistic, do you get what I'm saying?
@Ggordonhorseballs
@Ggordonhorseballs 3 жыл бұрын
I have to question the wisdom letting little dude wield a full size claw hammer at all. Instructor looks away for a second and dude is going to bury the tomahawk.
@dbx1233
@dbx1233 2 жыл бұрын
Did you post your comment from a "Safe Space?" I grew up in the 1960's and that's the way it was back then. With all due respect, you sound like a dumbass.
@discombobulatedfishbowl7548
@discombobulatedfishbowl7548 2 жыл бұрын
I was using real hammers, building fires, walking to school and shooting guns at his age. Born in '68. I can't figure out why everyone is so scared of every little thing nowadays. I guess you all are getting too many scary stories with the internet now. Turn that crap off and live.
@himmel-erdeundzuruck5682
@himmel-erdeundzuruck5682 2 жыл бұрын
I can really understand this child. The therapist is so annoying. Just giving instructions, no reasons. No wonder, that most nails are far away from her. This guy is really well educated accepting and even asking help from her. They don't even appreciate, that he is looking whether the nails get's through the piece of wood, which shows technical interest which the therapist seemingly doesn't share. She is only interested in making him obey her instructions. Is this meant to be social useful behaviour? It would be much more useful to ask for his decisions or why he is doing this or that. He is reflecting on what he is doing. But the therapist isn't. The main point isn't about accepting help - I'm not even sure whether teaching how to use the hammer would have been much more effective - it is about to share his thoughts. That's the main difficulty if this boy. He does not know her thoughts, he thinks she's stupid. As she doesn't explain why he should put the nail here or there, he sees no reason to follow her will. He has no sense of authority. So why is she embarassing him about where to put the nails? And he thinks it makes no sense at all to have so much ineffective talks. Why should he answer? She's not interested in his thoughts at all. A psychologist might have known, why he puts all nails on one side - far away from her. And might have adressed it. And even found out whether this was about putting all nails together or about getting away from her. And watch the last nail: every time it fall down he will put it a bit further from the place she told him to put it - and she doesn't even realize he's smarting her out 😄 autistic humour! - how I know his thoughts? I have two of them at home - and I am asking them about their emotions and thoughts. And I am explaining my thoughts before telling them to do something.
@pardist
@pardist Жыл бұрын
No. The therapist is doing it right. She is teaching him how to relate to others and remove his attention from obsessions onto himself and how he is with others. She is building his self esteem towards getting something done that he enjoys in company. Later he can learn to enjoy company without the need of obsessing. Later the child won't be bullied into being told he lacks social skills (negatively) and have things used against him to get manipulated as he can then say "I played with x y z" "I did therapy and it helped me"... therapy may be boring but helps.
@skcoll3086
@skcoll3086 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree with you. They are more interested in the objects than in the kids. Those kids are for them "another brick in the wall". They are completed disconnected from the kids' emotions. Their instructions are more important than understanding kids' perceptions and motivations ... Compassion and encouragement are two basic ingredients missing in their interaction with those kids ...
@pardist
@pardist Жыл бұрын
@@skcoll3086 that's incorrect. They are perfectly capable of understanding what relationships are. They do not lack in intelligence.
@skcoll3086
@skcoll3086 Жыл бұрын
@@pardist Dear Pardis, I agree with you. They were trained to take of these kids. Despite this, they show no patience. On the contrary, they provoke them by forcing them to obey their instructions. Their approach is almost hostile. Their interaction with these kids turns to be prescriptive.
@pardist
@pardist Жыл бұрын
@@skcoll3086 idk about that. He is a child and wants to play like all other children. The therapist is just teaching him how to play or be in his company and to bring awareness of his surroundings. An even better approach would be ballet or dancing lessons.
@laurag7295
@laurag7295 Жыл бұрын
I am really surprised they let them use hammers and nails! Talk about weapons of mass destruction! My autistic son would have wanted to see the camera up close, possibly even through it, he would have been fascinated by it, but he was a select mute and very, very shy so he would have just stood there, close to the camera, or he would have read a book.
@marvinhaines9297
@marvinhaines9297 3 ай бұрын
Please don't use the word "autistic." It implies that a person on the spectrum can be defined solely by their condition. I have autism, and I don't let it define my existence.
@larissaramos277
@larissaramos277 2 жыл бұрын
Tradução em português, please
@jerrymack6123
@jerrymack6123 2 жыл бұрын
I read all about the ministry of health during ww2 in Germany.
@alexsandra5452
@alexsandra5452 2 жыл бұрын
Por favor coloquem legenda em português. Pois gostaria muito de entender. Muito interessante o canal
@mariacamilatrindadegarcia850
@mariacamilatrindadegarcia850 Жыл бұрын
Também principalmente as entrevistas com os estudantes
@DavidRangel08
@DavidRangel08 3 күн бұрын
Puedes hacerlo desde tu dispositivo... Soy de Venezuela.
@jamieanderson8489
@jamieanderson8489 9 ай бұрын
As a non verbal child's parent. He should never be alone w 1 person. This video is disturbing. I found out that after being with both male & female in the role of parents. Because what you say to them they understand. YOU have to understand that you are the are the one w the deficit & learn for yourself.
@richardswink-embodiedsouls
@richardswink-embodiedsouls 9 ай бұрын
Exactly. Thank you for the honest comment.
@jamieanderson8489
@jamieanderson8489 9 ай бұрын
@@richardswink-embodiedsouls I did & always will be.
@richardswink-embodiedsouls
@richardswink-embodiedsouls 9 ай бұрын
@@jamieanderson8489 Yes all these abusive authorities want is a citizenry of compliant mindless zombies. The whole psychiatry industry is a corrupt sham. They are legal drug pushers. Nothing more. I go over all that on my channel. The reason they call it mental disorders is because our brains refuse to follow their abusive toxic orders. We were never meant to be in such submissive rigorous situations where the only thing that matters is our compliance. It is all, by definition, abuse. Best to you and yours
@Gem_Am_I
@Gem_Am_I 2 жыл бұрын
It was the lady doctor making him frustrated with that hammer in his hand😮
@Denise_Suzanne
@Denise_Suzanne Жыл бұрын
She was an occupational therapist
@skcoll3086
@skcoll3086 Жыл бұрын
That's really sad. Unfortunately those kids are emotionally distressed for a variety of complex reasons. Unfortunately there is not enough money that can be invested to help them, but there is much more money for other projects considered more important than those kids. We live in a world turned upside down. What a foolishness thing!
@night-streakmedia3319
@night-streakmedia3319 9 ай бұрын
The world has always been upside down what do you mean
@skcoll3086
@skcoll3086 9 ай бұрын
@@night-streakmedia3319 ... from day one up until now ...
@we8608
@we8608 2 ай бұрын
We've come such a long way. Right?
@1Q16V0
@1Q16V0 Күн бұрын
Why would they call this little boy sadistic? It just sounds like such a very mean thing to say about this little young child. Even though I know the video is very old, it's such a horrific assessment of a child.
@cowgirl3144
@cowgirl3144 3 ай бұрын
The adults, ( not therapists) are p. Poor with children. Why cant you have fun with him?!
@mahni_
@mahni_ 2 ай бұрын
Michael Joe is adorable
@hasaheadachenow
@hasaheadachenow 3 жыл бұрын
This is not available therapy of today .
@ppser818
@ppser818 11 ай бұрын
"...Michael abruptly whacks the Ocupational Therapist in the skull thereby creating a symbiotic relationship With the hammer and her skull",
@johnrigler8858
@johnrigler8858 Жыл бұрын
Wasn't this made when the mother was blamed for everything?
@ramonacheasebro2818
@ramonacheasebro2818 2 жыл бұрын
This doctor is crap....the way he words things is to get a rise out of the child ! And why would you put a child in a room with things he can't touch or pull ? Never telling him what is ok to touch and pull ! I just feel the doctor was setting the child up so he would do something wrong !!!?????? 😞
@GlideLA
@GlideLA 2 жыл бұрын
Well said. Sadly, the therapist's behavior was standard for that era. I've witnessed far worse than this.
@camillechang7120
@camillechang7120 Жыл бұрын
There were no services for the disabled at that time no treatment no early intervention and right to an education while disabled
@pammcwhorter877
@pammcwhorter877 7 ай бұрын
I dont have enough patience to work with him.
@thompson8354
@thompson8354 2 жыл бұрын
Why are they letting him play with a hammer?
@heathercraig8902
@heathercraig8902 10 ай бұрын
Even in the 1980s kids were allowed to play with hammers and nails. You soon learnt to be careful once you hit your fingers a few times. Many people on the spectrum enjoy and are skilled in using tools and technology and he is being closely supervised.
@hannaheliza3954
@hannaheliza3954 4 ай бұрын
They call him symbiotic psychotic which is so sickening.
@dawnmarie8903
@dawnmarie8903 2 ай бұрын
Disability can’t be fixed we are fine Treat as like you want to be treated with kindness and care😂🎉
@marcoantoniomandiola4580
@marcoantoniomandiola4580 3 жыл бұрын
Traduzcalo al español.
@catman835
@catman835 11 ай бұрын
I'm autistic and i have spd and adhd
@alehanjdro1
@alehanjdro1 11 ай бұрын
I have Asperger spectrum.
@BayEmirkiYT
@BayEmirkiYT 9 ай бұрын
Syndrome instead spectrum on asperger.
@glowinggoals111
@glowinggoals111 11 ай бұрын
Dont u think if he got some problem he can hurt himeself with this?we never giv these type of things to kid at home ..
@leximcfarland52
@leximcfarland52 2 жыл бұрын
😊
@989787777778787
@989787777778787 9 ай бұрын
Note, how they never said Autism or Autistic.
@1Q16V0
@1Q16V0 Күн бұрын
OK, so they called Michael sadistic, but I have to wonder with what's going on with him. He seemed a little bit aggressive at first. And then he calmed down when his teacher told him it was all right to touch things. He does seem overly compulsive with just wanting to touch and it does sound like he has a vocabulary kind of in line with a 2 or 3-year-old. Sometimes I wonder if this has to do with the parents related to over authoritarian type parents because a lot of us in this era had parents like that who were very authoritarian parents and just wanted kids to sit down and be good all the time. So when I look at Michael and I see this in this video. Then I wonder if he was told to sit still all the time at home. So when he goes to school, then he wants to explore and do things at school that he can't do it at home.
@annekabrimhall1059
@annekabrimhall1059 10 сағат бұрын
That’s funny occupational therapy for a six-year-old is hammering a nail.
@KSBN-CCB
@KSBN-CCB 2 жыл бұрын
i wish the us still thought like this,
@KSBN-CCB
@KSBN-CCB Жыл бұрын
@@daredawg3776 it is wdym
@KSBN-CCB
@KSBN-CCB Жыл бұрын
@@daredawg3776 by enabling people to accept autistics, they lower the standards of other people
@daredawg3776
@daredawg3776 Жыл бұрын
@@KSBN-CCB first off it's a disability not a disease, I'm autistic and I hate when people say it's a disease
@KSBN-CCB
@KSBN-CCB Жыл бұрын
@@daredawg3776 You're not autistic, thats what the doctors class it as. if you were autistic you and i wouldn't be having this conversation right now.autism is actually much more disabling than people think.
@daredawg3776
@daredawg3776 Жыл бұрын
@@KSBN-CCB i have a diagnosis, autism is a spectrum not all of us are drooling in wheelchairs.
@gaylecheung3087
@gaylecheung3087 Жыл бұрын
Down syndrome, autistic, children, and adults or treated and diagnosed so poorly back then they did not know anything about mental health. Thank goodness my parents, adore loved my oldest brother, who passed away when I was about five years old.
@chngo7180
@chngo7180 3 жыл бұрын
This is how the whole ADHD movement began. Back in the days a doctor confused a petty kid for a mental disease, started drugging him and posted an instructional video about it.
@lonnaproctor9547
@lonnaproctor9547 3 жыл бұрын
Yes!!!! So sad!! May they get the punishment coming for drugging the children 🙏
@teresadownes2422
@teresadownes2422 2 жыл бұрын
That man isn't restraining the child he's letting him walk around
@DenovaRaymaker59
@DenovaRaymaker59 2 жыл бұрын
I had slightly similar issues as a child, the child like this boy feels an emotional response in almost every moment of his life, imagine you are being forced to cry but at the same time have some definition of happy, you become an asshole. No one here can sit there and tell me it's not enjoyable to be an asshole Imagine if that situation forces you between the two. Which would you choose? Its an obsession with power, and the desire to need it. Feeling powerful can come in many ways, and I believe it is often searched by those most vulnerable. If ancient Greece has taught us anything, we humans have deep roots of pain and suffering, desiring power is far too familiar with us.
@pardist
@pardist Жыл бұрын
True though 😂 sad and hilarious comment at the same time.
@tomtroy3792
@tomtroy3792 Ай бұрын
He wants to touch it
@shirleyfunte3063
@shirleyfunte3063 10 ай бұрын
How dumb could that teacher get? I d never let my 6 year old grandson handle or a ven use a weapon like the hammer! He was "symbiotic l" too. The oy didnbt want her to lay her hand on that hammer! She s lucky he didn t but her with it when she insisted upon helping him hold the ladder. He wanted his way or the highway! This is how my grandson is. If he doesn't get to touch then he ll throw it.Ig doesn t matter what he s told he can t touch,fir in the he end he ll do whatever he pleases ahlnd when he pleases! He won t accept the whole rd "no" in any given time. Good luck! aI must explain to him in his stubbornness that he can t do what he wants. I tell him firmly the no word then he squirms to get away from me. I met him go. If be returns and riies the same behavior then I tell him he s not ready to learn about his to treat an item yet. He won t given up wh n he gets the chance to enter my apartment. He ll without permission to to my guitar and if he can t hold it ,he ll throw it because he dreams of breaking it!
@Dave-ml4ws
@Dave-ml4ws Ай бұрын
Looks like Forrest Gump.
@AWayOfLiving84
@AWayOfLiving84 16 күн бұрын
☯️🌏🕵🏻‍♂️♻️
@Mogi-ml5se
@Mogi-ml5se 3 жыл бұрын
Hoy en día hay muchos niños que se. Comportan así pero por falta de educación de parte de los papis,
@lizzvilla6468
@lizzvilla6468 2 жыл бұрын
Mi niña tiene autismo y Tengo que aceptar que aveces me distraigo y la dejo hacer lo que quiere pero no habla no pone attention no interactua y pues Creo que es Algo mas Aya de la atencion que le pongo osea que ya es un problema neurologico
@marksteven2616
@marksteven2616 11 ай бұрын
Get help from Dr Isibor for your child with speech delay my son was able to talk with his herbal treatment with 28 days 😊
@joesix-pack4022
@joesix-pack4022 11 ай бұрын
And now? The definition of "autistic" is now so broad that any differences between people diagnosed as "autistic" and the so-called "neurotypical" (the rest of us) is difficult to detect. The world has gone mad.
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 11 ай бұрын
says someone who very clerly has zero clue what they're talking about.
@joesix-pack4022
@joesix-pack4022 11 ай бұрын
@@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 Wrong. I have a degree in psychology (First Class Honours) and I worked as a support worker with people with autism for years. I know what autism looks like, and what it doesn't look like.
@Anna-vu9rz
@Anna-vu9rz 9 ай бұрын
Autism is not broad what are you on about..
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 9 ай бұрын
@@joesix-pack4022 ah but sadly... you are talking to an autistic person. in other words, you are like a foreigner telling a canadian what it is to be canadian. back down while you have a shred of integrity left, 'joe six pack' pfft. seriously? someone is compensating. XD
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765
@stiofanmacamhalghaidhau765 9 ай бұрын
@@joesix-pack4022 actually sweetie, based on your alleged first class degree in psychology, how about you enlighten us, o wise one, on 'what autism looks like' so we can out you as a fake
@Cindymancini75
@Cindymancini75 13 күн бұрын
I literally had a hard time in the classrooms because you demanded me to have your kid in my classroom. .I literally gotten my knock snapped back...
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