Agree completely on this. Feeling v uncomfortable seeing a mum detail her child’s SEN experience. I feel bad for commenting as I’m not a SEN parent (yet? Mine is only little so arguably could just be undiagnosed, idk how it works tbh) but I don’t think hammering home the point how much your kid struggles / isn’t going to have the same journey or capabilities as their peers in every single post you have about them is doing anything good for anyone? I get that representation matters and talking to likeminded parents matter but surely there’s a better way to do that than sharing photographed examples of your child’s laboured handwriting to
bleeping Facebook? And if it’s not that it’s a happy moment of normal childhood joy eg the swings then tainted by “you may not be up with your peers on reading/counting but your smile lights up the room darling
![Star :star: ⭐](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/2b50.png)
“. Like wtf? Imagine writing this about our husbands - “you may not know where I store the baby wipes because you’re on another planet but you shine sweetie
![Star :star: ⭐](https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/gh/joypixels/emoji-assets@5.0/png/64/2b50.png)
“