- Joined
- Aug 23, 1999
I think you hit on the biggest thing right there - if a guest has a specific issue of difficulty, they are willing to come up with compromises.That has to be hard to constantly be guessing and playing what we used to call "twenty one questions" over what your DD wants. It also puts more pressure on you to advocate for your DD. Hang in there. We all have our areas of challenge. ((HUGS))
The biggest point of posting our personal experience is that Disney worked with my DD's individual needs with one specific issue where she was experiencing difficulty. We approached Disney with a specific issue and not a general issue such as "the DAS won't work for us."We are into 21 questions here too.
My DD can't speak (she has a communication device she doesn't always want to use), but she has a large vocabulary of words she understands. The 21 questions get really tough when she answers no to getting her fingernail polish "taken off" because she wanted to be asked if she wanted it "removed".
Sometimes lots of fun
Most of the people in the lawsuit either didn't try at all or tried to make DAS work like they had used GAC by insisting "DAS won't work for us. We need an endless supply of automatic Fastpasses."