Highest Rated Comments


bebespeaks12 karma

Are you fluent in reading braille? Do you know how to use a braille writer machine? Do your parents use a Perkins Brailler or the new modern speech to text braille electronic gadgets?

bebespeaks1 karma

How common is Wolfe Parkinson White Syndrome in a fetus, that the mother's sister was born with WPW and only ever had symptoms in infancy? What are the odds it will happen again, and affect the next generation? Also can WPW and Hypoglycemia affect a person simultaneously, and if so, can symptoms such as syncopy and fatigue overlap?

bebespeaks1 karma

How often do you mismatch your clothes or confuse certain colored shirts and jackets? To the extent your outerwear clashes against the tshirt?

bebespeaks-1 karma

Chris: could you please begin making an effort to change your wording with special needs people, such as when you ask "IF You could tell the world the best thing about yourself, what would you say?" Its a little iffy on the grammar. What I hear is you're implying that they cant tell the world anything, bc you're saying IF. Meaning hypothetical. Meaning you're saying to them "you haven't been able to tell the world in the past, but what would you say now"....its too many words honestly. Also you're sticking a camera in peoples faces, so they already are sharing their lives with the world, so there aren't any reasons here to keep on implying "IF".

Maybe a better way to ask such a question to the special needs kids and their families would be along the lines of this: "__name__ , what is the best thing you love about yourself?" See here they're already talking to the camera, so theres no need to mention the world, and they're doing it in real-time so theres no need to add "IF you could", bc its already actually happening.