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WDW win for aspies! nice story


gardenmom5
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this was shared on an asd forum to which I belong. it brought tears to my eyes about how well this Disney employee treated a melting down aspie in the middle of a crowd.  she definitely got it right.

 

This is such a beautiful story...I hope for a world where this is the norm...luv luv luv💜💜💜

NICE JOB UNIVERSAL ORLANDO!!❤️🥰❤️

I would like to share something incredibly special with you all. A day we will never forget. Today we took our little boy Ralph to Universal Orlando Resort for the first time. Ralph is awesomely autistic, and we are proud to be a neurodiverse family. As wonderful, loving, intelligent and incredible as Ralph is, sometimes he struggles. (Don't we all?) When he struggles the hardest, he can have something known as an "autistic meltdown". Some people who are not educated about autism might see it as a temper tantrum. But the fact of the matter is that it is not the act of a spoiled and naughty child. It's a cry for help. This is Ralph's way of saying "I don't know how to monitor and regulate my emotions right now. I need help, please! I'm scared! I'm overwhelmed! I want to feel better and I don't know how!". And here came Jen to the rescue.

First I should explain that Ralph was EXTREMELY excited to ride the Spiderman ride at Islands of Adventure. He kept on asking us if the ride was coming up soon, and we would reassure him and say "Soon, Baby. Soon. First there are other rides before that one. That one is at the end. It's the last island. So we have to ride the other ones first. Okay?" He was SO patient for SO long. As patient as he possibly could be. He would say "Okay" and sigh, and then enjoy the next ride. But all the while, the excitement was building up to the pinnacle of his day: The Spiderman ride near the exit of Islands of Adventure.

So when we finally got there and handed them his handicap-access tickets which would make his waiting time a little bit more bearable (he would still have to wait the same amount of time, just not in a physical line), he was upset that we had to walk away from Spiderman in order to find a nice cool air conditioned place in which we could wait until it was our turn to ride. He was as patient as could be while we sat there as a family for the 15 minutes it would take until we could go back and walk in. The anticipation was driving him wild! But he did his very best to regulate it with the tools he has been given over the years by his teachers and therapy team at his special needs school back home. They, and he, are all AMAZING.

When we finally got back to Spiderman, he was leaping for joy. He thought "OH WOW! This is IT! FINALLY!" and you should have seen the SMILE on his face. It was incredible. Then when it was almost our turn to board, and he could see the end in sight, the vehicles right in front of us, we got the news that the ride had broken down. Everyone was very nicely asked to exit. And Ralph, understandably, lost it. (Wouldn't you?). My husband and I know the signs. We could see it coming, like an oncoming train. And yet we couldn't dodge out of the way. There was nowhere else to go. The autistic meltdown was GOING to HAPPEN. And happen it DID.

Ralph collapsed onto the floor while crowds of people were attempting to exit the ride and the gift shop attached to it. He began sobbing, screaming, rocking, hyperventilating, and truly struggling to breathe. A woman who worked there named Jen came over... no... no, she RUSHED over... and while I frantically kept trying to get him to stand up so he wouldn't get trampled on by people, she encouraged me to leave him on the floor if that is where he needed to be. Then she did this. She got down on the floor WITH HIM. She rested next to him while he cried his heart out, and she helped him breathe again. She spoke to him so calmly, and while he screamed and sobbed, she gently kept encouraging him to let it all out. She told people to keep on walking around them, so they would stop standing there and staring. And then she told him it was okay for him to be sad and feel this way. She understood. She would feel the same way too. His feelings were validated. And she told him he could lay there with her as long as he needed to until he felt better.

Eventually, he DID feel better. So they got up, and she told him he could have something from the gift shop to help him feel even better still. Anything up to $50. All he wanted was a tiny notebook and pen to write in about the size of my hand, and a tiny ID tag with Spiderman's face on it and his name. She suggested some other toys that were even more expensive, and he looked at her and said "No thanks, I'm good." And he SMILED. And THANKED her. He was exhausted and rattled, as we ALL get after one of his rare epic meltdowns. But what a relief it was that it was over. Thanks to Jen, and her knowledge about what to do. I asked her how she knew how to do that, and she told me that everyone at Universal Studios gets special training when it comes to people who are awesomely autistic, as well as other special needs. I hugged her for the LONGEST time... several times, if I'm being honest. And then the entire family left the store and marched straight over to customer relations without a single pit-stop, to sing Jen's praises. I showed the sweet woman working there the photos of Jen with Ralph, and she got misty-eyed herself, and hugged me. We showed each other our goosebumps on our arms and laughed and hugged yet again. And she ALSO told me how much training they get when it comes to helping people with various special needs.

Many thanks ALSO go out to the incredibly sweet woman working the Dr. Seuss carousel ride who let Ralph ride it again without having to get back in line because she saw the laughter and joy on his face. I wish I had gotten her name. MEGA thanks to Lindsey and Vee from Mythos restaurant who noticed him starting to panic a little when he needed a pencil so he could calm himself down from the over-stimulation at the park. He wanted to draw, and all he could find was a pen. He kept saying "Thank you for my pencil" very anxiously over and over and over again to Lindsey, who very sweetly kept trying to explain she only had a pen, but she would see what she could do. Then she rushed off, despite us telling her we would just go buy him one somewhere as soon as possible so he could draw. But she insisted she wanted to help. And then suddenly Vee appeared and she had a beautiful freshly-sharpened yellow pencil in her hand and the biggest smile for Ralph you ever did see. And when he drew them a thank you card with The Cat in The Hat on it, they thanked him and Vee asked if she could hang it in her office. He was THRILLED at this suggestion. It made him feel SO special that she wanted to keep it in the office to remember him by. Vee, Lindsey, THANK YOU. A big thanks to Augustin from The Mummy Ride, who saw us struggling a little bit with the lockers and rushed over to help, and then without even being asked, befriended Ralph and led us over to the ride via the magical "back way", complete with elevator and a bypassing of much of the line. And finally, a MEGA THANKS to our friend Sidney J. Dragon for being there and helping Ralph feel better! Bringing him water, also sitting down on the floor with him, and then being our tour guide the rest of the day to make sure everything else went smoothly for us from there on in! He works there too, and stayed with us until the park closed, making sure Ralphie stayed happy! Even though his work shift ended already! You are all MAGICAL people. TRULY.

A message to all of the people who work at Universal Studios: Please read this and know that my family and I thank you from the bottom of our hearts. I know Ralphie does too. THANK YOU for recognizing that Ralphie is a GREAT kid. A SWEET kid who just struggles with certain things (as we ALL do, neurodiverse or not). THANK YOU for treating him with SO much kindness and patience. THANK YOU to your supervisors and whomever trained you so well. THANK YOU for paying such close attention. THANK YOU for BEING THERE for us today, and for making us feel like Ralph's well-being was your top priority. He is OUR top priority because we love him more than ANYTHING and ANYONE, but you all only just met him today. And yet you behaved as if you were family. And we TRULY cannot thank you enough.

Too often people complain when something goes wrong, but say nothing when something goes RIGHT. Well that's not how I do things. Maybe it's because I'm a business-owner myself. But I refuse to go to bed tonight, regardless of how utterly EXHAUSTED I am, until I publicly thank you and sing your praises. THANK YOU. TRULY. And Mama Jen? We love you most of all.

See you next time, Orlando!
The Koppelman Family
(Steve, Lenore, and Ralph) from NYC
#universalstudios #autismacceptance #awesomelyautistic #neurodiversity #spiderman #marvel #rainbowinfinitysymbol #inclusion #love

PS: please feel free to share this story so these incredible employees and the wonderful staff who trained them so well get the applause they deserve!!! ❤️❤️❤️

PPS: I'm flooded with beautiful and concerned messages asking if Ralph ever got to go on the ride. Thank you so much for asking and for caring! He did not, but don't worry! We will save up for another trip to Universal, either in Florida or LA, and we will go to the Spider-Man ride FIRST. They DEFINITELY have a repeat customer in us! ❤️❤️❤️

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I saw that.   It is great.  And that is what I meant in my previous thread about teachers getting trained.  They were obviously corporately trained, so it can be done.

(and just a nit picky comment, but Universal is not WDW, and they are not affiliated.)

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5 minutes ago, DawnM said:

I saw that.   It is great.  And that is what I meant in my previous thread about teachers getting trained.  They were obviously corporately trained, so it can be done.

(and just a nit picky comment, but Universal is not WDW, and they are not affiliated.)

yes - but US wouldn't have been there if wdw wasn't there first.   as ds's gf says (she lives in Orlando) - it's all about the mouse.

a young woman that grew up with my kids was a Disney princess at wdw - then went to US.  she liked working for US better.

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3 minutes ago, gardenmom5 said:

yes - but US wouldn't have been there if wdw wasn't there first.   as ds's gf says (she lives in Orlando) - it's all about the mouse.

a young woman that grew up with my kids was a Disney princess at wdw - then went to US.  she liked working for US better.

 

I guess we just don't see this the same.  So, everywhere that is successful or does the right thing is because of Disney?  What about the failed theme parks?  Is that also because of Disney?  That makes no sense to me.

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1 hour ago, DawnM said:

 

I guess we just don't see this the same.  So, everywhere that is successful or does the right thing is because of Disney?  What about the failed theme parks?  Is that also because of Disney?  That makes no sense to me.

no - I'm sorry I wasn't clear.  Disney was the first into area of orlando, the others followed.  (look at the proximity) it's questionable if they'd have built there is Disney wasn't already there.

I dont' know why I seem to piss you off so much - but more and more that's how I feel whenever you respond to anything I post, and no matter the subject.

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1 hour ago, gardenmom5 said:

yes - but US wouldn't have been there if wdw wasn't there first.   as ds's gf says (she lives in Orlando) - it's all about the mouse.

a young woman that grew up with my kids was a Disney princess at wdw - then went to US.  she liked working for US better.

 

Yeah, I suspect folks who work for and run Universal Orlando would be pretty irritable about this nice story being mis-attributed to their competition. (I live in Orlando, too, by the way, and have relatives who either do or have worked for both companies.)

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2 hours ago, gardenmom5 said:

no - I'm sorry I wasn't clear.  Disney was the first into area of orlando, the others followed.  (look at the proximity) it's questionable if they'd have built there is Disney wasn't already there.

I dont' know why I seem to piss you off so much - but more and more that's how I feel whenever you respond to anything I post, and no matter the subject.

I assumed her comment was because the thread title says WDW.    It happened at Universal Studios and had nothing to do with WDW, even if WDW was there first.

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3 hours ago, Jenny in Florida said:

 

Yeah, I suspect folks who work for and run Universal Orlando would be pretty irritable about this nice story being mis-attributed to their competition. (I live in Orlando, too, by the way, and have relatives who either do or have worked for both companies.)

I haven't been to any of them. I don't pay close attention to which park, I don't know who does what ride - even when reading that story.   I see Orlando - and I think "mouse".  perhaps more so because ds's gf has repeatedly griped about how "in Orlando everything is about the mouse".

I was too busy paying attention to the story to worry about anything other than "some park in Orlando."  

as I also related, a young woman I've known since she was five - worked at both wdw and us-o as a 'character'.  she far preferred us-o for how they treated their employees.

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53 minutes ago, Where's Toto? said:

I assumed her comment was because the thread title says WDW.   

I have felt like she's been picking apart my comments for weeks - in many threads over many subjects.

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1 hour ago, gardenmom5 said:

I have felt like she's been picking apart my comments for weeks - in many threads over many subjects.

 

Many people here nitpick details.  It's the nature of spending time with people constantly correcting children, though it IS sometimes irritating.  To be frank saying WDW instead of US bothered me too, even though it is an otherwise wonderful story.  Did you know you can go up to your first post, click the option to edit it, and correct both the title of the thread and change WDW to US?

Edited by Katy
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1 hour ago, gardenmom5 said:

I haven't been to any of them. I don't pay close attention to which park, I don't know who does what ride - even when reading that story.   I see Orlando - and I think "mouse".  perhaps more so because ds's gf has repeatedly griped about how "in Orlando everything is about the mouse".

I was too busy paying attention to the story to worry about anything other than "some park in Orlando."  

as I also related, a young woman I've known since she was five - worked at both wdw and us-o as a 'character'.  she far preferred us-o for how they treated their employees.

 

It is a great story.

Well, again, I have family members (including myself) who have worked for either Disney or Universal or both, but I really have no clue what your comments about how Universal treats its employees have to do with the point a few of us are trying to make.

Honestly, since the goal of the original letter was to thank and congratulate employees of a specific facility who went above and beyond to provide excellent customer service, it seems to me that the respectful thing to do would be to make sure the right park gets the credit.

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27 minutes ago, Katy said:

 

Many people here nitpick details.  It's the nature of spending time with people constantly correcting children, thought it IS sometimes irritating.  To be frank saying WDW instead of US bothered me too, even though it is an otherwise wonderful story.  Did you know you can go up to your first post, click the option to edit it, and correct both the title of the thread and change WDW to US?

 

Not to be too nitpicky, but my own tendency towards wanting details to be right probably has more to do with years of being an editor than it does correcting my kids. (Or maybe I became an editor because I care about getting the details right. Chicken. Egg.)

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My brother has worked for Disney for over 25 years (and hates it but that's another story) and the first thing I noticed was that despite the title, it was not about WDW.   I thought I was missing something at first and even looked up to confirm the title said what I thought it did.

So, yeah I probably would have posted about that if it hadn't already been posted.

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13 hours ago, Where's Toto? said:

My brother has worked for Disney for over 25 years (and hates it but that's another story) and the first thing I noticed was that despite the title, it was not about WDW.   I thought I was missing something at first and even looked up to confirm the title said what I thought it did.

So, yeah I probably would have posted about that if it hadn't already been posted.

 

My husband worked for Disney for a while.  I have stories!  I liked it because we got free Disney entrance and we got to go to Employee Nights, which are awesome!  But he said it was a mess in the tax office.  So much so that they ended up outsourcing to Pricewaterhouse.   he could have stayed and worked for PWC, but he decided to jump ship at that point.

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7 hours ago, DawnM said:

 

My husband worked for Disney for a while.  I have stories!  

 

Imagine how many stories I have after my husband working for The Mouse for 20+ years!

(I was a part-timer, myself, for about three years when the kids were little . . . and just interviewed for a full-time gig this week.)

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2 hours ago, Jenny in Florida said:

 

Imagine how many stories I have after my husband working for The Mouse for 20+ years!

(I was a part-timer, myself, for about three years when the kids were little . . . and just interviewed for a full-time gig this week.)

 

Awesome!  I have an ex-boyfriend who has worked for a little over 25 years at Disney.  He absolutely loves it though.  

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2 hours ago, Jenny in Florida said:

 

Imagine how many stories I have after my husband working for The Mouse for 20+ years!

(I was a part-timer, myself, for about three years when the kids were little . . . and just interviewed for a full-time gig this week.)

Jealous!! But best of luck anyway. 

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