So this is my room. Yeah, this is a bit messy, so yeah. Like, books on the floor is probably my favorite. Ones on the floor is probably — so yeah, they just made — I’m not sure how long ago they made these, but they did just make these. This is a M.L.P. poster book. So this is Rainbow Dash, Twilight Sparkle, Fluttershy, Pinkie Pie, Rarity, and Applejack. So those are the main six ponies, and then there is the Sea and the Cutie Mark Crusaders, which are Apple Bloom, Scootaloo and Sweetie Belle. Well, since he has autism, I think it’s a sort of sickness. It’s like that you can never get rid of. If you get it, you never get out of it. You can’t get away from it. And sometimes I think about how hard his life must be, but he’s still happy with it. Looks like we’re out of ice cream. Guess I’ll have to use something else. Cherished grandson, right here. You can do it. I don’t want to do it on my own. So eat. How do you cut? Like this. Mom, I want this all over my pancake. I’ll hold that. You do it. What song is he singing about? Well, he’s singing about a woman who broke his heart. And so he’s going out to a bar, and he’s drinking a lot of alcohol and making himself sick because he already feels so bad, which doesn’t make much sense. Do people like alcohol? Is it good? Well, if you just drink straight alcohol, no. I mean, straight alcohol is actually poisonous. I don’t like alcohol. No. Part of it is you have to kind of have a big body. Just go ahead. What are you going to do? Stay here. [inaudible] area. You know you don’t have to be out here. Is that right? I don’t think you’re allowed to be out. Don’t. Don’t. Don’t. Huh? When you first met mom, and you went to, like, open the thing, and you say, will you marry me, mom? Oh, like on TV? It wasn’t exactly like that. It wasn’t exactly, because the tradition in our family is that Papee buys the ring. So I said, if you’ll marry me, my father will buy you a ring, believe it or not. And that’s what you can say to someone that you want to marry. You can say, if you’ll marry me, my father will buy you a ring. Are you listening? ‘Lawn Mower Man.’ By — who’s it by? By Ethan Floquet. If I was a school lawn mower man, I would drive slowly so people could watch me. I could be careful not to not crash into anything. Maybe I could live on a farm. I could grow blueberries, and my dad could work with me.” I don’t know if he’s going to be able to be on his own. I would worry. I would really worry that he’d get into a situation where he has no clue what to do. Falls asleep on the bus, and misses his stop by an hour, and so now he’s over in North Hampton. What does he do? That sort of thing. And that could happen with Ethan. So I must admit I sometimes think what he’s going to do when we’re gone. You know, when he’s 59, what’s that going to be about? I had long thought that working in a school cafeteria would be a wonderful option for him. The rule was you couldn’t touch your face or your nose and then touch the dishes or the machines. And once Ethan heard that rule, he could not stop touching his nose and his face. So he spent all day washing his hands, going back and 20 times in a row washing his hands, and he lasted a week. Bubby. I felt a terrible mix of embarrassment and despair. I began to worry enormously about Ethan having nowhere to go and nothing to do after he turned 22 and left school. I was terrified of Ethan ending up on the sofa of our house watching YouTube videos on his phone and getting lost in his own very lonely world. My parents are still really, really important in his life because he still needs to learn how to cut steak. Our parents have told us, we’re going to be more responsible for him, and not in the way of just telling him to be quiet. Some day, me and my brother Charlie are going to have to take care of him a little bit more and keep him under control. So this is Murphy. Come on in, Murph. Come on, come on, come on. This is our dog Murphy. O.K. So Ethy, what did you want to have in the future? What is — Just your vision for the future. Well, to retire when I’m an old man. Where do you want to live? Here. What’s here? In this house. Mom, like when you guys are no longer with me, I’ll still live in this house. That’s what I mean. You mean after we die? Bubby. Oh, bubby. (SINGING) Walking to the south of Roanoke, I caught a trucker out of Philly. Had a nice cold Coke. But he’s a-headed west from the Cumberland Gap to Johnston City, Tennessee, and I got to get a move-on before the sun. I hear my baby calling my name. I know that she’s the only one. And if I die in Raleigh, at least I will die free. So rock me mama like the wagon wheel. Rock me mama any way you feel. Hey, mama rock me. Rock me mama like the wind and the rain. Rock me mama like the southbound train. Hey, mama rock me. Mama rock me. Rock me mama like the wind and the rain. Rock me me mama like a southbound train. Hey, mama rock me. Yeah. My Vision Statement, by Ethan Floquet. I plan to continue to go to Brooke Shields Music Academy and work at Prospect Meadow Farm. I also plan on living at home with my family as long as I can. I also have a girlfriend I’d like to add also. [inaudible] For fun, I would like to keep playing basketball with my Special Olympics team, go out to eat, mow lawns, and collect business cards. My goals for the future are to learn how to drive a zero-turn lawn mower and to be able to take the PBT bus alone. I would also like to walk into town by myself to make purchases. So after years of fabricating visions for a future that we never honestly thought possible, Ethan came up with one that was optimistic and incredibly simple. I want my life to keep looking the way it does now. And glazed donuts. And glazed donuts. There’s just a lot of happy memories. And then this is my own business card right here. Oh, E, take that out and show it to the camera. Yeah. This is my — And show the front. And what does it say on it? Ethan’s Lawn Service, Ethan Floquet, Lawn Stylist. Inexpensive. Inexpensive, prompt, and innovative. Yeah. And how much do you get? Usually, I think it’s either 10 or 20 a lawn, depending on the size. Yeah. I spend it on — I spend it. Almost always on the same thing. What do you almost always spend it on? Panda East. Yes. And how do you get to Panda East? I walk and I take the bus back. And who goes with you? Nobody. Nobody. Hey, [inaudible]. How are you?