I would think late December would be better. You run the risk of coworker deciding to take more time, but you can make the argument that the vacation was planned in advance. You can't exactly get shirty if you have to cancel because the baby came early.
Jayne ,'The Train Job'
Spike's Bitches 41: Thrown together to stand against the forces of darkness
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
That sounds like she's just your kid, Susan. Really. Bring it up with her doctor next time she has a checkup, but otherwise I think it might just be the teacher trying to be helpful. Also, totally what Suzi said.
Not pointing is a sign of autism? I didn't know that.
Time out, Jessica's brain! Being a parent turns on switches you never knew you had, and it's SO HARD to shut them off sometimes.
Fred, I'd allow 2 weeks margin of error on either side of her due date, and also find out if she's planning to leave on her due date no matter what, or if she's planning to keep on working until she goes into labor. (HR policies vary on how flexible they are about that sort of thing.)
Not pointing is a sign of autism? I didn't know that.
Practically EVERYTHING is a sign of autism if you read enough parenting sites. It's ridonkulous.
I'm sort of glad I wasn't on the internet when Jake was born.
then I realized these folks are taking what scant knowledge they have about Y and applying it to the kids they come in touch with.
Yeah, this was a "reminds me of a friend of my son's" thing, and I couldn't help thinking, "Your son's friend is 16. Annabel is 4. This can make a difference." OTOH the teacher has seen far more 4-year-olds than I have, so if she doesn't think AB's behavior falls within the normal range... t shrugs I'm going to call the pediatrician and ask, just because AB's next scheduled physical is nearly a year away. But I'm not climbing the walls or anything this time.
Not pointing is a sign of autism? I didn't know that.
Yeah, it was a major reason the first person who evaluated Annabel for autism thought she had it. She didn't point. But then we, uh, made a point of modeling it for her, and she started doing it occasionally. It's never been her major way of getting our attention or indicating something, though.
But then we, uh, made a point of modeling it for her, and she started doing it occasionally.
See, that's the thing - I don't point much either. I mean, why would I? So I'm not sure why he'd pick up on it as a means of indicating "that thing over there" when waving his arms and yelling works just as well. (Not a behavior he picked up from either parent, btw. He came up with that one on his own.)
I don't remember my kids pointing, especially, either. Jake was big on "dat?" and sort of making grabby hands, but not pointing.
You see, Annabel sometimes spaces out, even in the middle of an activity, and for maybe 10-20 seconds it's difficult to impossible to get her attention--you have to get up in her face, say her name loudly, etc. And then she snaps out of it and will answer your question or go back to what she was doing before or whatever.
Susan, if it's any consolation, I did this all the time as a kid. I mean, I would just...kinda...blank out for a few seconds and then come back to reality and move on.
I grew out of it.
But I kinda miss it, sometimes. It was restful, in a strange way.