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- From those around me, I would say the average height of an 13 year old boy would be around 1.3m- 1.6m (4'3- 5'3). I'm not sure how accurate that is, but it's what I observe from the boys in my school. Their growth spurt usually comes when they are around 14–16 years old, but some can come as early as when the boy is 12/13 years old.
- A 13-year-old boy was arrested Saturday after police say he stabbed and killed a 15-year-old girl. Police are now saying the 15-year-old girl stabbed on Pennsylvania Ave. 13-year-old boy.
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Written by Naoki Higashida, a very smart, very self-aware, and very charming thirteen-year-old boy with autism, it is a one-of-a-kind memoir that demonstrates how an autistic mind thinks, feels, perceives, and responds in ways few of us can imagine. Parents and family members who never thought they could get inside the head of their autistic loved one, at last, have a way..more
Published August 27th 2013 by Random House (first published 2005)
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- 14 likes · like
Christy TurnerThat is the best way to say it. I feel this book was made to create a better understanding of others and have empathy.
Kathy PierceThis was an amazing book. This young boy has learned to communicate and also help others understand what it is like to be autistic. Very good read.
I…moreThis was an amazing book. This young boy has learned to communicate and also help others understand what it is like to be autistic. Very good read.
I chose to read it because the young boy is Japanese and I am also half Japanese. i have not known anyone with autism but found it fascinating how he has learned to communicate and explain his struggles.(less)
Books Rec'd By The Daily ShowI…moreThis was an amazing book. This young boy has learned to communicate and also help others understand what it is like to be autistic. Very good read.
I chose to read it because the young boy is Japanese and I am also half Japanese. i have not known anyone with autism but found it fascinating how he has learned to communicate and explain his struggles.(less)
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Rating details
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Jul 11, 2013Storm rated it it was amazing · review of another edition Shelves: favorites
(Note: I have autism)
I have to admit, I was on the verge of crying at some parts
because this book is everything I've wanted to tell the world but didn't know how
it made me understand myself a bit better, because like the author, I am not always sure why I do the things I do
It is one of those books I want as many as people as possible to read, to try and understand people with autism a bit better, and get rid of misconceptions.
I have to admit, I was on the verge of crying at some parts
because this book is everything I've wanted to tell the world but didn't know how
it made me understand myself a bit better, because like the author, I am not always sure why I do the things I do
It is one of those books I want as many as people as possible to read, to try and understand people with autism a bit better, and get rid of misconceptions.
This is a great book to be written by someone of any age and the fact that it is written by a 13 year old is amazing. The book reads like a FAQ of questions that anybody especially a parent of children with Autism or Asperger Syndrome have asked/shouted at their children about why they keep doing certain things. I bought this book after a particularly heated argument with my 8 year old. this book did help at the very least it told me that many of the things I questions e.g. 'Why do you keep doin..more
Oct 02, 2013Diane rated it it was amazing
This is the most illuminating insight into the mind of an autistic child that I've seen. Naoki Higashida was born in 1992 and was diagnosed with autism when he was 5. One of his teachers designed an alphabet grid to help Naoki communicate his thoughts, which were then printed into a book in Japan in 2007.
The writer David Mitchell, who has an autistic son, found it and pushed to get an English translation published. In the introduction, Mitchell wrote that the book was 'a revelatory godsend. Rea..more
The writer David Mitchell, who has an autistic son, found it and pushed to get an English translation published. In the introduction, Mitchell wrote that the book was 'a revelatory godsend. Rea..more
Oct 04, 2013Mindy rated it did not like it
I would be skeptical that this book was written by any 13 year-old, with or without autism. I'm putting it on my shelf next to 'Three Cups of Tea' and 'A Million Little Pieces.'
This is the longer review I wrote on Amazon.com.
http://www.amazon.com/review/R1XCQAT7..
This is a good review..
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/..
And here are some quotes..
'It is undoubtedly reassuring for parents of children with autism to discover in Higashida’s account a boy who not only sympathises with their..more
This is the longer review I wrote on Amazon.com.
http://www.amazon.com/review/R1XCQAT7..
This is a good review..
http://www.spiked-online.com/newsite/..
And here are some quotes..
'It is undoubtedly reassuring for parents of children with autism to discover in Higashida’s account a boy who not only sympathises with their..more
Dec 14, 2013pokupine rated it did not like it
I find it hard to believe most of this book.
First, as a speech therapist, I am puzzled as to why Naoki can read aloud but have such severe difficulties speaking to people despite having such well-developed language and great insight into his difficulties. He seems to have it all figured out and yet, being just one step away from making changes to his communication style, he settled into using an alphabet board (not the most efficient way of communication for someone who has obviously a lot to sa..more
Jul 23, 2013Best Eggs rated it really liked it · review of another editionFirst, as a speech therapist, I am puzzled as to why Naoki can read aloud but have such severe difficulties speaking to people despite having such well-developed language and great insight into his difficulties. He seems to have it all figured out and yet, being just one step away from making changes to his communication style, he settled into using an alphabet board (not the most efficient way of communication for someone who has obviously a lot to sa..more
Shelves: 2014-reviews, 2014-read, medicine-science, biography-true-story, reviewed
Idiot savant author or has Dad had a hand in this?
What to say about this book? It feels like half of it is the genuine thoughts and explanations for autism by an unusually intelligent child who suffers from severe autism. (view spoiler)[I am a bit fed up with the memoirs of people who live quite independently in the world and write their stories of autism when it is quite obvious that they have Asperger's, a much milder form. Fed up even if I enjoy their books. (hide spoiler)] The other half fee..more
What to say about this book? It feels like half of it is the genuine thoughts and explanations for autism by an unusually intelligent child who suffers from severe autism. (view spoiler)[I am a bit fed up with the memoirs of people who live quite independently in the world and write their stories of autism when it is quite obvious that they have Asperger's, a much milder form. Fed up even if I enjoy their books. (hide spoiler)] The other half fee..more
I'd read some of the pro- and anti- reviews of this book by an autistic 13-year-old Japanese boy before I sat down to read it, so I had some context of the surrounding controversy before I jumped in (so to speak). Basically, some people have criticized novelist David Mitchell for possibly embellishing some of the author's writing (he has said he “provided the stylistic icing on the cake” of the translation), and others have noted that author Higashida claims to speak for all autistic people but..more
Jan 01, 2017Whitney Atkinson rated it really liked it
3.5 stars
This book was intriguing! I'm taking it with a grain of salt, though, because I've been monitoring reviews about it. First I'll talk about my thoughts, though, then address concerns. I thought this book was wonderful. The writing was lovely with a lot of insightful analogies and heartwarming metaphors. I thought the question and answer format with fictional works inserted in between was very to-the-point and interesting. Overall, I learned a lot from this, and it made me consider a pers..more
This book was intriguing! I'm taking it with a grain of salt, though, because I've been monitoring reviews about it. First I'll talk about my thoughts, though, then address concerns. I thought this book was wonderful. The writing was lovely with a lot of insightful analogies and heartwarming metaphors. I thought the question and answer format with fictional works inserted in between was very to-the-point and interesting. Overall, I learned a lot from this, and it made me consider a pers..more
Sep 10, 2013David Schaafsma rated it did not like it
My son Sammy is 17. He has autism, the severe variety. He'll never be completely independent. He's very damaged. He's happy, much of the time, he has a sweet disposition, but we mostly don't know what he is thinking and feeling. He makes noise, but he doesn't speak. He communicates through his IPad's touch screen just okay, and through pointing. He talked at age level expectations until about age 3 and then over the next few years gradually lost all his ability to communicate audibly through wor..more
Aug 15, 2013Edoardo Albert rated it it was amazing
My eldest son has Asperger's syndrome and, while not locked into wordlessness in the same way the author was when he was little, he shares some of the behaviours described in this book, most notably the one on the cover: he jumps. He also intersperses that with bouncing up and down on a large gym ball, and running up and down corridors. And, you know what, I'd never asked him why he did these things. He just did them. Naoki Higashida, though, gives reasons for why he jumps, and flaps his hand in..more
Oct 05, 2014Darwin8u rated it really liked it
“We get swallowed up by the illusion that unless we can find a place to belong, we are going to be all alone in the world.”
― Naoki Higashida, The Reason I Jump
An interesting memoir, translated by David Mitchell, and written by a 13-year-old Japanese boy (Naoki Higashida) with autism. If you teach, live with, know someone who has autism or an autistic child this is (or at least was for me) an insightful glimpse into the struggles and perspectives of a child with autism.
I became slightly, and wro..more
Feb 27, 2013JSou rated it really liked it · review of another edition― Naoki Higashida, The Reason I Jump
An interesting memoir, translated by David Mitchell, and written by a 13-year-old Japanese boy (Naoki Higashida) with autism. If you teach, live with, know someone who has autism or an autistic child this is (or at least was for me) an insightful glimpse into the struggles and perspectives of a child with autism.
I became slightly, and wro..more
Shelves: biographies-memoirs, autism, non-fiction, eeeeeebooks, netgalley
I knew I would love this book before I even glanced at the first page because of a few reasons. Let's make a list, shall we?
1.) My son was diagnosed with autism almost 6 years ago. I've always wanted to be able to get inside his head and find out what he was actually thinking and seeing.
2.) My son also jumps. A lot.
3.) Written by a 13-year-old boy from Japan, this book was translated by David Mitchell. Anyone who has had any form of contact with me knows they will hear how Mitchell is my all-t..more
1.) My son was diagnosed with autism almost 6 years ago. I've always wanted to be able to get inside his head and find out what he was actually thinking and seeing.
2.) My son also jumps. A lot.
3.) Written by a 13-year-old boy from Japan, this book was translated by David Mitchell. Anyone who has had any form of contact with me knows they will hear how Mitchell is my all-t..more
Nov 18, 2013Emma Sea rated it did not like it
I rated a book by a 13 year old 1-star. I'm a monster. I feel bad, but I just didn't enjoy it.
I found it remarkably short on insight. There's a lot of 'I don't why we do this but we do'. If it hadn't been billed as being an insider's view of the experience of autism this would have been less frustrating.
I found the voice irritating rather than charming (there may have been a lot lost in translation).
Sorry :(
ETA: I loaned this to a person who works with special-needs kids, and they loved it so mu..more
Oct 07, 2013Laurie rated it did not like it · review of another editionI found it remarkably short on insight. There's a lot of 'I don't why we do this but we do'. If it hadn't been billed as being an insider's view of the experience of autism this would have been less frustrating.
I found the voice irritating rather than charming (there may have been a lot lost in translation).
Sorry :(
ETA: I loaned this to a person who works with special-needs kids, and they loved it so mu..more
Shelves: autobiography, non-fiction, memoir, autism
I've read a lot of first-person accounts of autism. This was not one of my favorites. It was, in fact, a very frustrating book to read. The writer's voice tried to speak for all persons with autism, for example:
'Q39 Why do you like being in the water?'
'We just want to go back. To the distant, distant past. To a primeval era, in fact, before human beings even existed. All people with autism feel the same about this one, I reckon. Aquatic life-forms came into being and evolved, but why did they t..more
'Q39 Why do you like being in the water?'
'We just want to go back. To the distant, distant past. To a primeval era, in fact, before human beings even existed. All people with autism feel the same about this one, I reckon. Aquatic life-forms came into being and evolved, but why did they t..more
Aug 26, 2016Heidi The Reader rated it liked it
The reviews on this one from my Goodreads friends are very mixed and I understand why. The Reason I Jump touches on a very emotional topic. I'm not an expert on autism so I am completely unqualified to determine if Naoki wrote this book with or without help or the over arching truth of his experiences. However, as a reader, I thought that some of Naoki's words were very beautiful.
Perhaps he could have connected with more people if he had chosen to write 'I' and 'me' instead of 'us' and 'we'. Who..more
Perhaps he could have connected with more people if he had chosen to write 'I' and 'me' instead of 'us' and 'we'. Who..more
I worked with autistic children of all ages and abilities at one time. I am too big a skeptic to believe that these are the words or thoughts of any 13 year old.
I question it so much that I went back to find some examples. Remember, these are supposedly his words:
~ 'there is another way to say what you want without using the vocal nervous system'
~ true compassion is not about bruising the other person's self respect'
~ 'the thought that our lives are the source of other people's unhappiness, tha..more
I question it so much that I went back to find some examples. Remember, these are supposedly his words:
~ 'there is another way to say what you want without using the vocal nervous system'
~ true compassion is not about bruising the other person's self respect'
~ 'the thought that our lives are the source of other people's unhappiness, tha..more
Jul 12, 2013Harriet rated it really liked it · review of another edition
As a parent with a child on the spectrum, this was an extremely useful book. Of course it can't provide all answers because it is written from the point of view of one particular child. I sort of wish that my son would write his own version for me to read, but this book was a definite reminder to hold onto my patience and understand that obeying instructions is not such a simple matter of listening and following but involves a complex journey in the mind of an autistic child. The book was fascin..more
Aug 31, 2016Mai rated it it was amazing Shelves: reviewed, favourites, beautifully-written, painful-reads
This book in my opinion must be everybody's cup of tea, it's quite important if I do say so myself.
Having autism, raising an autistic person or knowing one, all comes with pain attached, but living with autism is a thing and raising/pitying one is another. It's ten fold painful to live with autism your whole life, whichever level you might have! It's painful, frustrating, agonizing, and depressing, and with all the former stated feelings it's still massively ignored or belittled, I don't quite g..more
Jan 12, 2018lov2laf rated it really liked it · review of another editionHaving autism, raising an autistic person or knowing one, all comes with pain attached, but living with autism is a thing and raising/pitying one is another. It's ten fold painful to live with autism your whole life, whichever level you might have! It's painful, frustrating, agonizing, and depressing, and with all the former stated feelings it's still massively ignored or belittled, I don't quite g..more
Shelves: audiobook, nonfiction, borrowed-scribd, nonfiction-autism, 150-200-pages, actually-autistic-authors
There's some skepticism and criticism for this book questioning whether this thirteen year old nonverbal boy actually wrote it and/or that it speaks in too big of generalizations. I agree with the generalizations bit but, putting that aside, there is value in this read and I enjoyed it.
The structure of the book is in an easy Question and Answer format addressing some of the most common questions people familiar with a person on the spectrum wonders.
Questions like:
Do I want to or like being alone..more
May 11, 2014Mara rated it liked itThe structure of the book is in an easy Question and Answer format addressing some of the most common questions people familiar with a person on the spectrum wonders.
Questions like:
Do I want to or like being alone..more
Shelves: non-fiction, audiobooks, psychology, 2014-reads
The Reason I Jump is the memoir of a Japanese boy, Naoki Higashida who, at the time of its writing, was thirteen. Naoki, who is autistic and writes with the aid of a visual alphabet card, offers his answers to a series of questions (including, of course, 'What's the reason you jump?'). I knew nothing about this book prior to coming across it as a daily deal on Audible, where it aroused 99 cents worth of my curiosity. I certainly wasn't disappointed as I had no real expectations going in (s..more
Jul 13, 2013Lindsay Seddon rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
This book is just brilliant.
I don't know anyone who is autistic, and if I ever meet them, I have to admit, I don't really know what to do. Before I read this book I didn't know enough about autism to know how I should react, and it made me feel awkward and embarrassed. What better way to find out more than reading this, a book about autism written by an autistic child?
This book addresses everything you want it to in terms of the social aspects of children with autism. How a child feels about the..more
I don't know anyone who is autistic, and if I ever meet them, I have to admit, I don't really know what to do. Before I read this book I didn't know enough about autism to know how I should react, and it made me feel awkward and embarrassed. What better way to find out more than reading this, a book about autism written by an autistic child?
This book addresses everything you want it to in terms of the social aspects of children with autism. How a child feels about the..more
Sep 07, 2013
Ellie rated it it was amazing
Shelves: non-fiction, 2013-individualchallenge, first-reads, bio-memoir, autism
I won The Reason I Jump: The Inner Voice of a Thirteen-Year-Old Boy with Autism through LibraryThing’s Early Reviewer program. I will say at the outset that it is a wonderful book, short but powerful. It is written by 13-year-old Naoki Higashida, a Japanese boy who was diagnosed with autism at the age of five. He writes by spelling out words on an alphabet grid although apparently he is able to use a keyboard but finds the more arduous process more comfortable.
I was very interested in the book..more
I was very interested in the book..more
Mar 14, 2014Suzanne rated it it was ok
I don't know how to review this book.
My first impression was that it had a bit of an Upworthy vibe surrounding it. 'A thirteen-year-old autistic boy finds a way to speak. What he says will astound you.' (My facebook feed is littered with this stuff and I am done with it.)
But, the introduction from David Mitchell gave me hope that there was something more here. He described how helping to translate this work (originally in Japanese) helped him round the corner in dealing with his own autistic son..more
My first impression was that it had a bit of an Upworthy vibe surrounding it. 'A thirteen-year-old autistic boy finds a way to speak. What he says will astound you.' (My facebook feed is littered with this stuff and I am done with it.)
But, the introduction from David Mitchell gave me hope that there was something more here. He described how helping to translate this work (originally in Japanese) helped him round the corner in dealing with his own autistic son..more
Sep 03, 2013Kelly (and the Book Boar) rated it did not like it
Find all of my reviews at: http://52bookminimum.blogspot.com/
I’d feel bad about giving a 1 Star rating to a book written by a 13 year old if I believed at all that a 13 year old actually wrote this book. Since I do not I have zero guilt.
I see The Reason I Jump as yet another outlet that has adults manipulating a child in order to advance their own personal agenda (*cough* Heaven is for Real *cough*). I believe Naoki’s mother, as well as David Mitchell and his wife, used Naoki’s alphabet board..more
I’d feel bad about giving a 1 Star rating to a book written by a 13 year old if I believed at all that a 13 year old actually wrote this book. Since I do not I have zero guilt.
I see The Reason I Jump as yet another outlet that has adults manipulating a child in order to advance their own personal agenda (*cough* Heaven is for Real *cough*). I believe Naoki’s mother, as well as David Mitchell and his wife, used Naoki’s alphabet board..more
Jul 02, 2013Elizabeth Hopkinson rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
I read this book because I hoped to gain a better understanding of an autistic neighbour who lives near me. But what I actually discovered was that I have a lot more in common with autistic people than I realised. Some of the ways in which I see and experience the world are the same as some of the ways Naoki describes in the book. And his little short stories are so beautiful. So, as well as helping me understand my neighbour, this book helped me feel better about myself.
Oct 06, 2013Kyle rated it liked it
'When I was small, I didn't even know that I was a kid with special needs. How did I find out? By other people telling me I was different from everyone else, and that this was a problem.'
Initially, this book was structured very differently than I expected. I approached it thinking it would a memoir-style account that subtly gave insight into the autistic mind and experience; when the book didn't fit my pre-determined category I had already constructed for it, I became annoyed. Yet, why should it..more
Initially, this book was structured very differently than I expected. I approached it thinking it would a memoir-style account that subtly gave insight into the autistic mind and experience; when the book didn't fit my pre-determined category I had already constructed for it, I became annoyed. Yet, why should it..more
Wow. I don't even know how to do this book justice. Really.
I read it in one sitting and I'm about to pass it on to my fifteen-year-old son who is autistic, and then to his father and stepmother in hopes that it will resonate with my son and help him to feel less alone, and with hopes that his other parents will finally understand him better.
I've read lots of books with autistic characters, finding that sometimes fiction is more helpful in revealing the unique characteristics exhibited by those..more
I read it in one sitting and I'm about to pass it on to my fifteen-year-old son who is autistic, and then to his father and stepmother in hopes that it will resonate with my son and help him to feel less alone, and with hopes that his other parents will finally understand him better.
I've read lots of books with autistic characters, finding that sometimes fiction is more helpful in revealing the unique characteristics exhibited by those..more
There is a very good review of this in the New York Times, which echoes my own discomfort with the book. Which are Naoki's words and which are David Mitchell's? I haven't read any of Mitchell's writing, so I don't know his style. And I can't speak another language, so I can't comprehend what changes may be normally made without the translater totally altering the original idea. But some things didnt ring true, and that saddened me, because I'd hoped for some answers that may help me with my auti..more
Jan 03, 2014Franziska rated it liked it · review of another edition
How to write an honest review on this? I'll try anyway.
This book was moving. Although hard to believe that it was written by a thirteen year old. But I found his descriptions of his thoughts and perceptions very very interesting. He reminded me that things we take for granted maybe for other people are very strange and vice versa.
They reminded me of the books of Daniel Tammet (if you don't know his books, check them out. They are incredible beautiful and illuminative!).
This book was moving. Although hard to believe that it was written by a thirteen year old. But I found his descriptions of his thoughts and perceptions very very interesting. He reminded me that things we take for granted maybe for other people are very strange and vice versa.
They reminded me of the books of Daniel Tammet (if you don't know his books, check them out. They are incredible beautiful and illuminative!).
A survey of autism, as written by a 13-year-old autistic boy. This book gave me a number of insights into how the mind of an autistic person functions and how heavily impactful upon such a person's emotions the syndrome is. This is a brief, simple, yet compelling book, worth reading for anyone who wants better to understand autism from the 'inside.'
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Mental Health Boo..:January nonfiction - The Reason I Jump | 8 | 57 | Jan 29, 2019 07:40PM |
2018 Beyond the C..:The Reason I Jump | 1 | 3 | Jun 07, 2018 09:59AM |
Around the Year i..:The Reason I Jump, by Naoki Higashida | 10 | 84 | Jan 10, 2018 12:49PM |
Around the Year i..:The Reason I Jump, by Naoki Higashida | 2 | 13 | Jan 08, 2018 02:17PM |
Good book to have an insight of autism | 1 | 6 | Jun 29, 2017 01:46AM |
Nothing But Readi..:Higashida, Naoki- The Reason I Jump: The Inner Voice of a Thirteen-Year-Old Boy with Autism- Informal Buddy Read; Starts July 10, 2016 | 16 | 160 | Jul 11, 2016 11:13AM |
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Thirteen Year Olds
Naoki Higashida (東田 直樹 Higashida Naoki) is the Japanese author of The Reason I Jump: One Boy's Voice from the Silence of Autism. He was born in 1992 and diagnosed with autism when he was five. He was 13 years old when he wrote the book which was published in English in 2013. Reviews have been mixed, both celebrating the accomplishment of a mentally and emotionally challenged young author and expre..more
“Everybody has a heart that can be touched by something.” — 48 likes
“When you see an object, it seems that you see it as an entire thing first, and only afterwards do its details follow on. But for people with autism, the details jump straight out at us first of all, and then only gradually, detail by detail, does the whole image float up into focus.” — 35 likes
More quotes…A PAEDOPHILE teacher who had sex with a 13-year-old pupil and became pregnant with his child has been caged for 10 years.
Alexandria Vera, 24, had sex with the child 'nearly every day' and claimed the boy's parents approved of her keeping the baby and were happy for their son to stay the night at her home.
The middle-school teacher from Houston, Texas was impregnated by the teenager after meeting him in her summer school English class in 2015, when he was in eighth grade.
I have to write a csv file with the results of above two queries. Filename has to be in the given format. Another query to pull summary info 3. Mas 90 4.0 odbc driver. This job has to run daily and upload file with latest data.
The inappropriate relationship began after the boy contacted her on Instagram and they had sex over the course of nine months, with one fellow pupil even claiming the boy brazenly grabbed her bum in the classroom.
Vera also sent the boy pornographic pictures of herself and allowed other students to have sex in her home - and her six-year-old daughter reportedly called the child 'dad'.
She briefly went on the run before turning herself in and her sentence was reduced from 30 years after admitting a lesser sexual offence charge.
She had an abortion and the boy is currently in foster care after she was charged with aggravated sexual assault of a child.
State District Judge Michael McSpadden, jailing the school Miss from Houston, Texas, said: 'We want out educators to teach our students.
'We want them to keep their hands off the students.'
PC PERV
Paedo who had 'I love child porn' as his computer password caught with hundreds of pics of kids - but is SPARED jailVideo
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Dramatic moment suspected paedophile who lives in Britain is arrested after returning to Polish homeland'COMFORTABLY OUT'
Who is Gary Gibson and what is a 'virtuous paedophile’? Christian who is anti-pornography‘WHY I STAND BY MY PAEDO HUSBAND’
Brit wife of ‘virtuous paedophile' insists she still loves him despite being told he 'sexually touched’ a five-year-oldVideo
'DO YOU REALISE WHAT TROUBLE YOU'RE IN?'
Moment paedo, 54, who 'groomed boy, 14' on Grindr is snared by vigilantesAccording to the Daily News, a therapist speaking on Vera's behalf told the court : 'I think she was driven by being in love with him.'
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