From the BBC:
“Florida mother overwhelmed by
response to lonely autistic son”
A US mother has told the BBC of
the overwhelming response she has received after tweeting about her lonely
21-year-old autistic son. Kerry Bloch's son David has been non-verbal for most
of his life but amazed his parents by asking his first question: "Would
someone like me?" She posted the comment on Twitter and received a deluge
of heart-warming responses. Among them was basketball star Joe Ingles who
invited David to a game. Kerry told BBC OS that David's question had taken her
completely by surprise at their home in Neptune Beach, Florida. "I could
tell he was thinking or processing something. He then just looks at me and
goes: 'Would someone like me?' "I
was flabbergasted. That's the first question he has ever said to me. I left the
room because I had to cry. I didn't want David to think I was upset." Kerry says she told David she was sure there
were "thousands of people out there" who would like him, adding:
"You're a wonderful boy." She then logged on to Twitter and shared
what had happened, with a picture of David. "I sent it and didn't think
anything about it. I'm not very computer-literate or internet-literate. My
phone just kept making these constant ding ding ding noises. I checked and it
was hundreds of notifications coming in." David has a rare
immunodeficiency and only 20% of his immune system is working, Kerry explained.
He is home-schooled and his exposure to the outdoors is limited, she says. "He's
never been in school, he hasn't been allowed to be around children his
age," said Kerry. "He's never had a friend because of that so I know
he's lonely, and we're doing the best we can to get him to have friends
somehow. But he's smart enough to realise he wants a friend and he wants people
to like him." The thousands of responses include many from parents of
other autistic children. Australian NBA star Joe Ingles, who recently revealed
he and his wife Renae have a child with autism, invited David to a Utah Jazz
basketball game. Kerry said messages had also come from the military, fire and
police departments and sports groups including David's favourite football team,
the Jacksonville Jaguars. David was
"a changed boy" she told BBC OS. "He's been running around the
house just smiles. We've been trying to read every single message. We've been
up to four or five in the morning," she said. "I'm trying to reply to
every single person. David does not want anybody to be left out, he loves
everybody. I think he understands what it feels like to be left out so he wants
to include everybody and just to tell everybody he loves them."
^ It’s nice to hear this kind of
story (ie. complete strangers being nice) with all the negative stories we hear
every day. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50310275
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