Tim And Debbie Mom And Son

Tim And Debbie Mom And Son




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Tim And Debbie Mom And Son
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By Antoinette Bueno‍







7:30 AM PST, November 12, 2021





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90 Day Fiancé star Debbie is at a crossroads in her life after her son, Colt, married his wife, Vanessa. On the season 2 premiere of 90 Day: The Single Life on Discovery+, 69-year-old Debbie not only put herself back out there in the dating scene , but her relationship with 36-year-old Colt drastically changed due to him and Vanessa wanting more privacy now that they've tied the knot.
Unlike Colt's ex-wife, Larissa , and his ex-girlfriend, Jess , Debbie actually approves of Vanessa -- even though the two eloped without telling her. However, it's clear that Colt continuing to live with his mom -- which was a major issue with both his exes -- is no longer acceptable. Vanessa noted that it's definitely "awkward" with Debbie living with them and that it put a damper on her and Colt's sex life.
Colt told cameras of his mom, "As much as she might think that her and I are together forever, she has to believe that we deserve our own freedom."
Colt then told Debbie that when she brought over "a gentleman caller," it was weird even though he and Vanessa left the house to give them privacy. Debbie said she'd been thinking about moving out ever since Colt and Vanessa got married but had been taking her time, and didn't want to rent an apartment she couldn't afford. But Colt dropped the bombshell that he and Vanessa were moving out of the house in three months when the lease was up. Debbie didn't take the news well and got up and left, even though Colt insisted that he loved her.
"F**king bas**rd," she said. "Rotten bas**rd. Sneaky about getting married and doesn't tell me, and then he's hiding the fact that he wants me to move out, it's not the Colt that I know. This is a shi**y thing for him to do to his mother, just to kick me out on the f**king street."
"I'm really scared," she tearfully continued. "I don't know what's going to happen. I went through sh** with him and I was there for him the whole time and now to dump me on the street, it's not right. And I have cats. What the f**k am I going to do with my cats? Be homeless with my cats, I guess. ... I feel like he is cutting me out of his life."
Meanwhile, Debbie was also having a hard time dating again after being married to Colt's dad for 27 years. He died 13 years ago after suffering a massive heart attack. Debbie decided to put herself out there again and signed up for dating apps, and said she had a high sex drive. Although she'd been Catfished three times, she did end up meeting one man in person and had sex with him on their second date. But she was disappointed in the experience and broke things off with him.
"It was a little uncomfortable, if I can say that," she said. "I must be spoiled by my husband and my toys because it wasn't what I was looking for."
She also told her gal-pals, "He was a terrible lay. What can I say? He told me to stop talking. I was talking, I was saying nice things, and he said, 'Shut up.'"
But her friends told cameras that Debbie did, in fact, talk too much. Still, Debbie said that the experience at least gave her more confidence to get back on the horse again when it comes to dating.
"It's difficult getting back in the dating game," she noted. "I mean, times have changed."
She also told cameras, "Nobody plans on not having your life partner with you, but there comes a time when that person's not there anymore. Colt's happy, he's got his wife, and they have their lives. It's sad, I really hope that I can find someone. If I can't do it within a year, then, I'll just be alone with my cats. It's probably my last shot."

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Introduced by Autism Awareness Australia CEO Nicole Rogerson
When Tim Sharp was three, his mother Judy was told he had severe autism and should be put in an institution. Judy refused to write him off, believing he had a place in the world.
Judy nurtured Tim’s gift for drawing and quirky eye for detail. At age 11, he created “Laser Beak Man”, an alter ego superhero character, whose adventures Tim turned into vibrant works of art.
25 years later, Laser Beak Man has taken Tim all over the world with international art exhibitions and a puppet stage show at the Sydney Opera House.
Australian Story first met Tim Sharp when he was a schoolboy. Now, 16 years later, the next chapter in the epic tale of a mother who moved mountains for a son who had a gift that only she could see.
INTRODUCTION: Hi, I’m Nicole Rogerson from Autism Awareness Australia. Tonight, an epic tale of a mother who moved mountains for a son who had a gift that only she could see. Australian Story first met the Sharp family back in 2004 when Tim was a 16-year-old schoolboy with autism who’d found a way to communicate through drawing. Judy was his struggling single mum and his biggest champion who was risking everything to help Tim connect with the wider world. But there was even more to that story, as Judy will reveal. Tonight, 16 years later, we check in with the Sharps and see just how far mother and son have come
JUDY SHARP: Tonight is one of the biggest nights of our life. We are so excited because Laser Beak Man, it’s opening night. Tim’s dreams are always big. And in this country, there is nothing bigger or better in Tim’s mind than the Sydney Opera House. But to actually be in it with Tim’s creation is more than we ever, ever dreamt of.
MAREN SEARLE, ACTOR: Tim’s an amazing artist and his characters they’re vibrant and they’re real to us. Yeah.
JON RIDDLEBERGER, ACTOR: I feel like each of the characters sort of is a different facet of Tim. I am playing the black sheep. I say things like Waserbeak Man, hewooo.
TIM SHARP: I laugh at the black sheep cos he’s always funny.
SAM SHARP, BROTHER: That’s one of the best things, seeing Tim in his moment, doing his thing, the thing that inspires me is that he’s proved everyone wrong.
NICOLE ROGERSON, CEO AUTISM AWARENESS AUSTRALIA: I was talking about Tim recently and somebody said something like oh not all kids can be as talented as Tim Sharp you know, it’s highly unrelatable. And I was like “you’re missing part of the story”. It’s about this kid from the suburbs who had autism, he learned how to do something, and he had a mother support him a thousand percent and take this thing on the road and to become what it’s become. It’s the story of how they got there.
DEB JOHNSON, FRIEND: I couldn’t have predicted this, no, no. I guess partly because I know where they came from. To me it just shows what can be achieved when someone like Judy has the drive and seizes opportunities, yeah just how far you can go.
JUDY SHARP: The Sharps are the three of us, I’m Judy the mum, my eldest son is Tim and my other son is Sam.
I was a single mother and I had a child with a disability, and we didn’t meet any other people like that. It’s one of the hardest parts of autism for me to deal with, the isolation and the loneliness.
NICOLE ROGERSON, CEO AUTISM AWARENESS AUSTRALIA: It’s hard sometimes to reconcile this idea of Judy being at home, alone, isolated in the suburbs trying to work out what autism is going to mean for her boy to the Judy we see now who’s so strong. Life just kept throwing grenades at her and Jude keeps throwing them back. Her main goal has always been Tim. And she was unrelenting and always has been. And she’s a juggernaut behind the two of them, and it’s been amazing to watch.
JUDY SHARP: The day Tim was born was the happiest day of my life. But it only took a few days and things started to change. I thought there was something wrong but I didn’t think too much. I actually blamed myself. First time mother, I just thought I didn’t know what I was doing. I had a little boy who was distressed all the time and had trouble with all the basics of life. Couldn’t communicate what he wanted. We lived next door to a little girl who was born six weeks earlier so they’re exactly the same age and she’s running around the yard and yelling out “encyclopaedia” and Tim’s just saying ‘beep beep’. So we went to see a specialist. And that was the first time autism was indicated. And that was the worst day of my life.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: She was told to basically put him away in an institution and that was one thing she would never even dream of.
JUDY SHARP: I still can’t believe that he could sit there opposite me and tell me to put a 3-year-old child away and tell me that he’d never talk, never go to school. Never learn anything. He said Tim never had any feeling for me. He said Tim only used me as a tool to get what he wanted.
JUDY SHARP: I knew there was a beautiful loving little person in there, who was interested in the world around him, would pick up a little flower and look at it and see beauty in it. Then we started, all the hard work started.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: Judy’s marriage split up about 12 years ago. And her and Tim and Sam have been on their own ever since. So she’s had a struggle, definitely.
JUDY: Thirty-six. How old were you?
JUDY: Seven. What happened that year?
TIM: I started in year sev- year 2.
JUDY: Year 2, you did, at St Brendan’s Primary School.
JUDY: You did lots of things that year.
TIM: I did. Sports carnival. I was running.
JUDY: Oh, you were very fast, you got a ribbon.
JUDY: All the kids were cheering for you.
JUDY: Did it make you go a bit faster?
DEB WARE, FRIEND: I didn’t think he was going to make it through school because he was just so, I don’t know, into himself. I just thought this isn’t gonna work. You know, what are they going to do with this boy?
JUDY SHARP: That’s when he started to draw. He’s always like superheroes, since he was a little boy, he loves the idea of people being able to transform and do things that you can’t normally do. 
He wanted his own superhero, to do the thing that he wants. Don’t we all.
TIM SHARP: I draw him when I was 11 years old. I made him up. Laser Beak Man. He’s a superhero.
JUDY SHARP: And there’s Tim in there somewhere, I think that’s what it is.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: Laser Beak Man’s been around as long as we’ve known the Sharp family. We’d start getting birthday cards and my kids just love them, you know, hysterical when they read some of the comments that were inside them.
JUDY SHARP: We got so much interest and it just seemed to snowball and then all of a sudden out of the blue one day we got this application to the VSA Very Special Arts Festival in Washington DC. It sounded fantastic, you had to submit drawings and they had to go before a jury. It’s huge, absolutely huge. Applicants from around the world, only 200 chosen. Then I read it and it said George W Bush, the President of the United States, is the honorary chairman. Then it says White House, you’re going to the White House, it didn’t, it no longer became an option about thinking about going or not. We were going.
 I think a lot of people thought we wouldn’t go because we couldn’t afford it. So the only way we could go was to get a mortgage on the house and some people thought I was mad. I want Tim to feel the best he’s ever felt in his life. Like a superstar. I want him to feel not even like an equal, better than an equal.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: Judy is focussed at the moment on Tim’s future at the moment and that’s about all she’s focussed on. She wants a future for Tim.
JUDY SHARP: I can’t even bear the thought of him ending up doing some repetitive thing, separate from society and having no sense of fulfilment and enjoyment or satisfaction but with Laser Beak Man there’s a chance to make another life. We got a phone call saying that the White House event is off. There is no White House event. And it was quite simply said like that. And there’ll be no President Bush because he’s got to go to a meeting. So, it’s a bit of a blow.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: She certainly took it hard, in the beginning. And she was worried about telling Tim as well because he was obviously looking forward to it. Yeah.
JUDY SHARP: We’re not going to the White House now.
JUDY SHARP: Because they’ve cancelled it.
TIM SHARP: What did they cancel it for?
JUDY SHARP: I had to remember that my point in going was for Tim’s artwork and that opportunity was still there.
TIM SHARP: I can’t wait to go to America and I’m excited about it.
LEANNE MELLA, FESTIVAL JUROR: Laser Beak Man was one of my favourite characters. He is someone who is heroic, who is in command of his universe, moving through it in a spirit of goodness I guess.
MAN: Oh, you were born on a Monday.
JEAN KENNEDY SMITH, FESTIVAL FOUNDER AND JFK’S SISTER: I think it’s very creative. I think it shows a very keen imagination. And a great sense of colour and drama. And I think that’s all in there. When you look at, for me, anyway, I mean that’s the beauty of art, somebody else might see something quite different.
MC: We’re kicking off our fourth international VSA arts festival. Please join me in welcoming festival participants from around the world in a magnificent parade of flags, bring em on.
JUDY SHARP: He enjoyed it and then he told me afterwards I did a good job and I said yes you did Tim you did a very good job. And he said I carried the Australian flag, he seemed to realise the significance of what he did which, I was really pleased because I wanted him to. And he’ll remember that forever, too. Can’t take it away from him.
JEAN KENNEDY SMITH: It has been a special privilege to meet the young artists who so generously share their extraordinary gifts with us.
JUDY SHARP: At the opening ceremony Jean Kennedy Smith made a speech as the founder of the VSA arts. And we met her and she walked up to Tim and she looked directly at him and she was interested and Tim said to her “Are you Mrs Bush?” And she just laughed and she didn’t flinch. And they tried to explain that the building was named after her brother.
And Tim said, ‘Who’s your brother?’ And he didn’t know and they explained that and it didn’t matter in the least, she was so lovely. She was so lovely I said you’ve gotta come home with me and I’ll cook you roast lamb.
DEB WARE, FRIEND: She’s come back full of confidence and yeah, she’s gonna take, take on the world, I think.
JUDY SHARP: I’ve never been happier, never been happier. But more importantly it’s the blossoming of Tim Sharp that thrills me the most, that there’s a whole world out there that does accept him just the way he is. It’s kind of like all my dreams are coming true. What I wanted for tim is a possibility. Everyone’s got a place in the world, we’ve just about found Tim’s I think.
2004 was the year that our lives changed, and they would never be the same again. The Australian Story program aired, we all watched it together and we thought well that was really nice but that’s the end. But as soon as it finished the phone started and it didn’t stop. We were inundated.
TIM SHARP: The first exhibition I’ve had was at Hands On Art that used to be at Southbank back in 2005.
JUDY SHARP: There was this amazing explosion of Tim’s work and creativity and ways of expressing himself with these ideas. It was nothing like he was doing before. One day we had an exhibition and there was this big fuss and people were surrounding someone and it was Cate Blanchett, his most favourite actress ever.
TIM SHARP: I met an Australian actress named Cate Blanchett. She’s been in lord of the ring movies. That’s my favourite movie.
JUDY SHARP: She said well can you show me your art,
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