Audrey is jealous 😂💀

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Tbh i love Connor as a character, he seems like a genuinely cool guy in his own way and doesn't really spite people

Blue_
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I mean he said get a job. He immediately got a job.

bldmyamean
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Conner is a mommy's boy and Mandy is a daddy's girl 😂❤

toobaaijaz
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As someone with autism, I really resonate with this. Growing up I never thought to help for the sake of helping. As an adult it blew my parents mind having that exact same conversation. Weirdly enough I had a harder time saying no but nobody asked me to do anything. I didn't understand that you help because of common courtesy, responsibility, and kindness. I just waited. Now I am 30 and feel stupid remembering how I was when I was younger which to my understanding is normal for 30.

CaptainSherbertTheQuestionable
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I was like him. I always sat around wishing someone would ask. When I was a boy scouts, the scout master started asking me to take care of the younger scouts and always praised me. It changed my life.

manilamartin
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Connors a good kid definitely just a bit misunderstood, also seems depressed

Yamommasblubber
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I love how chill the dad and Connor were with each other. If only all interactions between parents and their children could go like this

cjhudgins
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Clear communication is really important in any relationship.

dioandgiorno
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I'm autistic and damn, that was too accurate! Its not that we're lazy or inconsiderate, its that our first though is "if they didn't ask me, they've got it handled." We aren't avoiding work, we're avoiding stepping on your toes. If you ask us to do something, unless we're not able or its inturrupting another task, we'll probably get right to it.

DarkKnightsix
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I'm autistic. When I was in my twenties, I was very similar: I would happily sit on my ass all day and never even think about helping or asking if I could help on something I got benefits off, but if you asked me to do something I did my very best to do it as perfect as I could and you could get a lot done from me.
I'm 39 now and living on my own from a long while, so I picked up a few things over the years, but I still have to "ask myself" to do my own chores in my own place, and I have to actively think about f.e. offering help with the dishes after somebody offered me a meal. It's not laziness, it's not trying to benefit without doing something in return, it's not a lack of appreciation... it's simply one of those social thingies that come natural for neurotypical people but not for me.

Candisa
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Dad is finally going to respect his son, because he works hard.

robertmoore
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I think this is great for the improvement of their father-son relationship, I think they didn't connect well enough before because not only did they not have many things in common when it came to interests and hobbies but the dad had also previously misunderstood him as someone who was just coddled by his mom and was incompetent to take care of himself or others and this clearly proves he is not at all incompetent and it's helping him see a new side of Connor.

MarySanchez-zlsg
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Kids got a point, close mouth don't get fed

kingcure
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As its always been. Communication is KEY!

ToddHollis-xq
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As an Autistic person this really sums me up. I lived with my grandparents. And they always wondered why I never chipped in unless asked. I just assume that unless asked, they have it sorted. I prefer to be left alone on tasks. So figured they did too.

kurgenvods
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I resonate with this. I have constant arguments about people saying I’m cold or heartless for not helping out of the kindness of my heart. I don’t mind helping it’s not a big deal but I just don’t want to help out of the blue bc I don’t want people to abuse my kindness. Yet it becomes this foreign revelation that I don’t mind helping just ask for my help, I don’t mind spending my time giving a hand just ask for it. I genuinely think of a person doesn’t ask it’s solely bc they have it handled

Sterben_knight
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I'm not autistic, but I sometimes didn't take initiative because it backfired on me (e.g., "I didn't tell you to do that!" and/or "Just do what I tell you to do!").
It really pissed me off to think I was helping only for the person to get mad at me, so I pulled back.

On RARE occasions, it happens now with my wife. She'll get mad about something I did and I retort, "Give me a rule to governs these situations and I'll do my best to always follow it." Sometimes she'll reply with something like, "it's not really a rule..." At that point I'll say, "Unless you can give me a rule, or a set of parameters that I can follow, I'll leave it for you to do." ... and that's often what happens. She ends up doing almost everything herself because she can't articulate the "rights and wrongs" in her head. Oh well... not my cross to bear.

coolraul
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My brother has autism and every time I see Mandy's brother, he reminds me of him! His depiction is spot on to how they move, speak, think and act.

elpasoethan
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"Brought you a fresh one, Dad". That's a damn good son, right there

alesztra
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“There’s instructions on the bottle”. Don’t let your wives know you can read.

scoobydoo