I'm really struggling as to how to relate to parents with NT kids at the moment.
On Thursday, we went for dd's six month review & it turns out that we're now being referred on for another opinion. Whilst that is brilliant in terms of we can be sure that dd is getting the benefit of loads of expertise, my heart sunk at the prospect of more interviews, tests etc. I guess I'm still feeling a bit low because of that.
Then on Friday I was chatting to a friend & describing how dd is very unsettled (I think as a result of all not being well neurologically) and this mum said 'Oh, my 18 month old dd is just like that at the moment, I think it's just a phase that they go through....' I responded by saying that in the case of dd it's a six month 'phase' with no light at the end of the tunnel at present.
Then on Sat I was out with the same mum and some of her friends. As soon as the evening started I thought 'oh no' as the bragging about what their kids had achieved at nursery started and I ended up blubbing. The friend then said 'is it because all of our kids are.........?'. Fortunately she stopped short of saying normal. She also said that the women could sympathise but not empathise. I disagreed with this, I don't want people to pity us, not for a minute, but perhaps would like people to try & empathise as to how we feel sometimes.
Having just moved to a new town I feel it's really important to try & make new friends, but I'm finding it so tough as I just feel hypersensitive all the time. I have a positively gorgeous dd, who I love to bits, and yet as soon as I meet up with mums like the above I find that all of her lack of milestones just get highlighted (unintentionally of course).
Sorry, this is a long mopey thread, but I could really do with some advice on how to toughen my skin. I know the comments are insensitive because I choose to interpret them as such, but I can't help feeling in one sense I'm being told that she's exactly like other babes & I shouldn't highlight her as being any different (or suggest that I'm finding it tough!!), the next moment I'm being told that she's not part of the group, she's different.