The Daily Mail love to drop hints like this.interesting placement of stories here!
Is that you Christine?!Emma Jones from MOTDx on BBC3
Never heard of her went and had a look at her insta and I see Paddy is following her.Emma Jones from MOTDx on BBC3
47 wowI have just googled Emma Jones - wow, she has some spectacular 'assets' doesn't she?and she is 47 - she looks bloody amazing!!
Helen Skelton is also being mentioned as being the other womanEmma Jones from MOTDx on BBC3
Helen is too nice for paddy surely?!Helen Skelton is also being mentioned as being the other woman
There is loads of interaction between them on Twitter too. Nothing major..just flirty bantsNever heard of her went and had a look at her insta and I see Paddy is following her.
47 wow, I had a look on her insta after I saw her being named here. Do we think Paddy will move on quickly with someone else? I do.
She's not 47, she was born in 1990.I have just googled Emma Jones - wow, she has some spectacular 'assets' doesn't she?and she is 47 - she looks bloody amazing!!
I don’t think it’s Helen her husband more or less left her for another woman. The Helen Skelton thread is a good read.Helen Skelton is also being mentioned as being the other woman
Apologies- the photos are the correct person but I obviously got the date of birth from another Emma JonesShe's not 47, she was born in 1990.
If a friend or colleague or family member etc had this diagnosis, of course I would accept it 100%. When it's a celeb telling everyone they've had that (or any) diagnosis, especially a celeb who chats shit, I usually take whatever they say with a pinch of salt. Same way I dont believe Gemma Collins when she says she;s lost 3 stone.I'd just like to see some medical evidence, that's all. Not just take someones word for it. A lot of people lie in the media these days to push an agenda and I for one am extremely cynical when someone actively chooses to disclose personal medical information, to me it's an odd thing to do. But that's just me.
AGree with this, and this is why the NHS have Stroke centres, Cardiac centres etc - it's so that clinicians see lots of the same thing all day every day and keep their skills up, learn and become experts. Rather than your local hospital seeing two strokes a week. Id rather my children were somewhere the staff had lots of experience/training which would probably mean not a small local private school.Speaking from experience smaller schools don’t tend to have the experience when dealing with ASD. I know funding would never be an issue, but I do hope the school will seek ASD trained staff as the children progress.
I have a bit in common with Christine in that I have two children and both are autistic, and since they were diagnosed I now realise that I’m autistic too.Re the autism diagnosis, if it’s genuine then I would feel awful for questioning it, especially as adult women do have a harder time being diagnosed; on the other hand if it is not accurate, then it’s not unfair to question it given how some of how Christine acts is entirely inconsistent with everything most of us would understand ASD. Kind of a tricky one.
So I won’t say anything too disrespectful, but I have my own private opinion on whether it’s likely to actually be the case that Christine is autistic and that influences my opinion of how she acts and publicises herself and her family’s business.
I agree, I think she’s become an expert at masking. I watched the Full Monty that she was on and that was a very different Christine. No one knows what goes on behind closed doors.I have a bit in common with Christine in that I have two children and both are autistic, and since they were diagnosed I now realise that I’m autistic too.
The way she has spoken about how she’s felt all her life chimes exactly with my experience. She perfectly summed up what it’s like to be an undiagnosed female. I even think her Barbie doll image/plastic surgery is a form of masking.
Not sure, did they not have IVF for the twins? Or maybe I'm thinking of someone else.You just know Paddy will have someone knocked up in a year
Not only that, but people generally have such a narrow perception of how autism presents. If I had a pound for every time I heard someone say “they can’t be autistic, they’re loving and social!” or “they can’t be autistic, they can make eye contact!” I’d be rich. Autism is a lot more complex than the stereotypical non-verbal child lining up toys in the corner.She has also recently been diagnosed with ADHD too, which could explain why her presentation is different to what others experience, either with themselves or with others.
It seems to be so varied and complex that it can be applied to just about anyone. So what’s the point?Not only that, but people generally have such a narrow perception of how autism presents. If I had a pound for every time I heard someone say “they can’t be autistic, they’re loving and social!” or “they can’t be autistic, they can make eye contact!” I’d be rich. Autism is a lot more complex than the stereotypical non-verbal child lining up toys in the corner.
You are either autistic or you're not. Brains are literally functioning differently. It can't apply to 'just about anyone'.It seems to be so varied and complex that it can be applied to just about anyone. So what’s the point?
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