Teen's family transformed after autism intervention

unozero

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....wait what


"(CNN) -- Until recently, the Bilson household was under siege. Thirteen-year-old daughter Marissa, who has autism, ruled the roost, screaming shrilly until she got her way and enjoying special privileges that didn't extend to her siblings, Brittany, 15, and Brendan, 6."

SOURCE (also has a video)

I found the headline very confusing



very interesting (if not entertaining:devil:)
 
They are now all autistic. She has transformed them!

And wow... 5 days of that program... 20,000 dollars? What a ripoff.
 
That girl looks hot.
 
i still act like that, i see nothing wrong with it
 
I'll be damned if my retard child gets the best of me in my household.
 
Possibly best of all, Marissa can now go out in public without creating a scene -- a goal Mary Bilson was eager to achieve, because before, the Bilsons "could never go out together as a normal family."

I lol'd because this can never happen.
 
it absolutely boggles me to see these sorts of articles where some unhappy parent is whining about how they couldn't control their kid until someone else comes in and tells them how to, it's just like that video with the mother ACTUALLY CRYING about how she couldn't stop her 16 year old high school dropout son from playing World of Warcraft all day.
 
it absolutely boggles me to see these sorts of articles where some unhappy parent is whining about how they couldn't control their kid until someone else comes in and tells them how to, it's just like that video with the mother ACTUALLY CRYING about how she couldn't stop her 16 year old high school dropout son from playing World of Warcraft all day.

my mom once took my PC and tossed it against the wall when I refused to take down the trash lol.
 
I bet she wouldn't be so spoiled if they slapped the shit out of her every now and then.
 
I reckon had the autistic kid been their first kid, things would've turned out different. They might have thought they were doing an OK job at raising the older non-autistic kid, so would've tried interacting with the autistic kid the same way... which is a big mistake.
 
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