Thank you for posting this!! We are buying family annual passes & our son is autistic, this helped a lot for us tonfigure out which rides he could enjoy & which would be too overwhelming! Appreciate you!
@@DocumentDisney thanks so much!! We are really hopeful this will help him to acclimate to the busyness of life around him when he's surrounded in his favorite characters! Your channel is INCREDIBLY helpful to us!!!
As an autistic person this is honestly a cool idea! Very loud noises and flashing lights can be distressing. It's a good idea to have fun but also be smart!
Another autistic adult here, and it's a great idea to prep! I was terrified of a lot of rides when I was young, mostly because I didn't have a full understanding of how safe I actually was on them (was scared of falling out, malfunctions, etc.). Anything that went upside down was a no-no. Once I hit my teens, though, I became the family adrenaline junkie and still go on thrill rides in my early 30s, often alone because my friends and family are too freaked out by them! So you never know what can become a fascination! As far as Disney rides are concerned, I remember in my earlier childhood (went to Disneyland regularly as a kid and a SoCal local): -Hating the elevator in the Haunted Mansion (Did not like the sudden dark, and didn't even NOTICE the hanging guy, lol. The ride itself was fine; I was cool with ghosts.) -Hating Mr. Toad's "Hell" scene (Too warm!) -Disliking the power plant scene on Roger Rabbit (I thought the electricity was actually dangerous) -Being terrified of the spike hallway in the Indiana Jones queue (Thought they wouldn't stop; I was trying in vain to pull my dad through the line. The ride itself, however, was an instant favorite.) -Ducking into the boat on PotC during the fort battle (Cannons were scary!) Once I got a bit older though, I developed a deeper appreciation for the special effects and just how much effort goes into immersion in the parks. Best of luck!
This is wonderful! We're taking my nephew (almost 9) for the first time next month, and he's a bit nervous about the rides so we're watching them here first so he's more comfortable!
Sometimes it’s nice to have this on in the background. Fills the home with a positive vibe. Something calming about people have fun on these rides.
I agree! sometimes i have it on in between zoom meetings to get my fix LOL
Thank you for posting this!! We are buying family annual passes & our son is autistic, this helped a lot for us tonfigure out which rides he could enjoy & which would be too overwhelming! Appreciate you!
That made my day! Thank you! I hope you and your family have a great time with your new passes!!
@@DocumentDisney thanks so much!! We are really hopeful this will help him to acclimate to the busyness of life around him when he's surrounded in his favorite characters! Your channel is INCREDIBLY helpful to us!!!
As an autistic person this is honestly a cool idea! Very loud noises and flashing lights can be distressing. It's a good idea to have fun but also be smart!
Another autistic adult here, and it's a great idea to prep! I was terrified of a lot of rides when I was young, mostly because I didn't have a full understanding of how safe I actually was on them (was scared of falling out, malfunctions, etc.). Anything that went upside down was a no-no. Once I hit my teens, though, I became the family adrenaline junkie and still go on thrill rides in my early 30s, often alone because my friends and family are too freaked out by them! So you never know what can become a fascination!
As far as Disney rides are concerned, I remember in my earlier childhood (went to Disneyland regularly as a kid and a SoCal local):
-Hating the elevator in the Haunted Mansion (Did not like the sudden dark, and didn't even NOTICE the hanging guy, lol. The ride itself was fine; I was cool with ghosts.)
-Hating Mr. Toad's "Hell" scene (Too warm!)
-Disliking the power plant scene on Roger Rabbit (I thought the electricity was actually dangerous)
-Being terrified of the spike hallway in the Indiana Jones queue (Thought they wouldn't stop; I was trying in vain to pull my dad through the line. The ride itself, however, was an instant favorite.)
-Ducking into the boat on PotC during the fort battle (Cannons were scary!)
Once I got a bit older though, I developed a deeper appreciation for the special effects and just how much effort goes into immersion in the parks.
Best of luck!
Damn you didn’t need to include the autistic part jeez
I miss the aesthetic of Disney world. It sucks you in and makes you feel like your actually there. It's beautiful 😭
This is wonderful! We're taking my nephew (almost 9) for the first time next month, and he's a bit nervous about the rides so we're watching them here first so he's more comfortable!
This video was amazing. Thanks for sharing all the rides. Makes me want to go back now. Great job.
I can’t wait for try it again
I love Disney world
This was great. The wait times seemed so short when we're you there?
They weren’t too bad! I went in mid-September and mid-November, when school is in session, so the parks weren’t too crowded.
20:40 "owie owie!"
I'm going next week!!!
was the jungle one interesting for younger kids?
it would be yes
I miss Snow White's Scary adventures
😃
30:23
dude at 1:34:48 looks like he's having a blast lmao
Japanese Disney casting
🇻🇳🇨🇦👩❤️💋👨🏡😁
A
I know it's a kids ride but that one eyed spider at 1:31:26 is laughably pathetic looking.
I live in Montana what was the temperature? Just wondering sorry
It was in the mid-60s/70s about two weeks ago
Riru r u coming to go to the rest of eyes even y but I don't think I have up there at u u u up for the rest and I have