Hi mark, my 13 year old son aspergers. In the past and less so now he
has felt extreme sensitivity to wearing certain clothes and shoes. He seems to
be getting better with this. For the past 12 months though he seems to have a
fixation on closing every door in the house. It either has to be wide open or
fully closed. He cannot bear to think of it half closed and says this gives him
pain in his head. This is driving my husband, my 9 year old daughter and I mad.
He is up and down all day and night closing doors after us. My husband refuses
to give in to his demands and it causes many arguments. I know this is genuinely
upsetting my son but he said he cannot get out of doing it as it causes him
pain. What can we do?
Dear Mark
Hutten,
I am a Research Associate in Dr. Dennis Wall's lab at
Harvard Medical School. We are months away from completing a mobile system for
rapid detection of developmental delays and would like to discuss recruiting
for our study through your community. With more community involvement, we will
be able to finish work on an application that simplifies the process of
detecting developmental delays. The study consists of uploading natural home
videos and straightforward parent questionnaires. At this years International
Meeting for Autism Research (IMFAR), Dr. Wall received the prestigious
Slifka-Ritvo Innovation in Autism Research Award for this clinical
research.
We
are seeking caregivers of children 7 and younger with or without a diagnosis of
a developmental delay. It will take only minutes to participate,
but will help ensure families everywhere get the attention they need as early
and often as they need it. We would love to
discuss how we can collaborate and reach out to your community as it is robust,
well-rounded, and filled with caregivers who want to help one another.
Also, we have a "supporting organizations" tab on our website and
would love to help get more traffic to your site by posting your organization's
name, logo, and website in this tab if we move forward with this collaboration.
Please let me know your thoughts.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My son has Aspergers and he has
difficulty in making and keeping friends. Academically, he is very
good but I'm seeing some difficulty in maintaining the grades. He
has trouble in comprehension and does good if given individual
attention. He does have a IEP but it is not helping him that
much. Since he is capable of doing his work without assistance, he is not
given any extra help. I strongly feel he is not getting correct motivation
in school and i understand that one teacher cannot give individual attention to
one kid is she/he has 29 more kids to take care. We decided to move to a new
school district in hope that new place will have a new begining. And I do
not want to make same mistakes as I did in previous school.
Could you explain step by step process how he can get extra help from new
school. I'm new to this and need some help. Appreciate your response.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
So a new school year has started and I've already received a call about
lack of participation, didn't hand in the first assignment, and sleeping
in class. This is 3 days into the school year!! He tells me he doesn't
care, wants to drop out, school is stupid etc. I'm currently working
with psychologists at the school to determine if he is ADD. I've had him
placed in inclusive classrooms but he has already gotten an E on a
participation assignment! He just turned 15 and is now repeating 9th
grade at an alternative school. Does not want to go back to his home
school. I just don't know how to handle another year of this. I punish,
reward, you name it. Nothing works. He doesn't care.
A friend of mine suggests taking everything away from him. Problem is
that I've done that before. Did no good. He still failed. He tells me
punishing him doesn't change how he is. He just has no interest so he
doesn't bother. I've tried rewarding with things he likes, but I've
never been given the chance to EVER reward him. He never gets far enough
to earn it.
I don't know where else to turn but to just let my kid become a loser
and fail. But why do I have to let someone like that live in my house
and be a leech off of me?? I've spent thousands on lawyers, therapy,
meds. Still nothing. He is draining the life out of me and I want him
gone to see what is so great out there outside of school. I'm tired of
providing a warm bed, hot shower, and a nice meal all for nothing. What
am I supposed to do for the next 3 years??
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hey there. Thanks for adding me. My husband has Aspergers and I'm the
Neurotypical wife. We just listened to your seminars and find it fits
perfectly. Matt has never had anyone be able to put it into words like that and
give him specific objectives. I've asked for a lot of the things you spoke on
but it was conveyed differently through the seminars. Are you having any coming
up or can we schedule a private counseling session or two with you? We are
currently stationed in Jacksonville FL and I'm deployed right now but after the
first of the year we could drive up.
We were at a very tough spot in our marriage. We just had our 1 yr
anniversary last month and I've been gone for 3mo so it's been tough. Your book
and seminars have been a saving grace. We appreciate them so much.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I am a school counsellor, a young boy 10 years old, with suspected
Aspergers, by his teacher, has recently been referred to me for counselling. My
concern is how to engage him in the counselling process. He doesn’t understand
why he needs to come to counselling, and any initial attempts at engaging him
in any activity have been met with resistance. Do you have any tips?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hello Mr. Hutten,
I just stumbled across some of your
workshop segments on YouTube regarding NT Spouses of Asperger's partners.
It is as if you wrote specifically about the dynamic of my husband and
myself.
I have been researching High Functioning
Autism/Asperger's Syndrome for a few months and am relieved to have found the
information. My husband is "The Asperger's Loner" type and
we've been through four marriage counselors. The last counselor grew
frustrated with us and said that therapy was useless unless my husband actually
made an effort to do something...anything...towards participating. The
therapist suggested I move on for my own sake as well as my children's.
I've reached the end of my rope and
am emotionally and physically spent after 31 years of this. The pain
expressed by my two sons, 11 and 16 years old, is really what made me decide
that my husband and I should separate. I have them both seeing a family
therapist who said it would be best to diffuse the tension in the house by
having my husband leave. The boys are sweet and caring, but frightened by
their father's increasing detachment and over-involvement with his passion:
film. My husband is a film curator at a museum and works two film jobs
and takes on freelance work to avoid coming home.
If there is stress of any sort or
tension, he will dive back into work. He works 7 days a week at his
regular job plus weekend mornings at a second job. He also works 2-4 nights a
week. His mom just died and he took a third job to avoid having to care for
her. I am the corporate admininstrative assistant/wife and do all
financials, taxes, future-planning, child-raising, home and yard care, college
visits with Junior, etc. He will work to earn $$, but cannot handle any other
responsibilities involving contact at home. I'm in the resentment phase
even if he says he loves me (no sex for 9 years + no dialog + no dates + no
help = none of my needs met = no relatable love). I put my career aside
to raise and protect my kids and his career/film passion has grown to the point
of swallowing all of us whole. Separation leaves me quite vulnerable
financially, especially since he is in the not-for-profit world of museum
curation.
I don't know where you live/work,
but I'd love to get my husband connected to you online or in person or....
anything. He probably won't pursue it if I drop the ball in his court,
but I've been sending him the YouTube clips because I thought he might connect
to the video images. I'm feeling like it's over for us, but I can't stand
thinking of the world of hurt he's headed for while the rest of us run for
cover. He's a gentle giant, but he can suck the energy right out of our
home the minute he walks in....
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
HI, thank you so much for your email! My son is almost 14 and has
Aspergers (among other issues) but we are largely dealing with severe
anxiety/depression and anger these days! He was recently hospitalized for
8 days in June (which was horrible) and we are now on a day to day basis as far
as school is concerned. He likes school, but it's like all of a sudden, he just
can't seem to handle anything. Is this normal? He currently takes Risperdol,
Intuniv and Cymbalta and things are a bit better, but we still deal with this
imaginary "switch" that seems to suddenly flip where he'll be
perfectly fine and happy and then the next second he's stressed out, anxious,
and angry! It's very hard to see my sweet boy become this other
"person" with cuss words coming out of his mouth and mean, spiteful
words...and then, the switch flips again and he's back to normal. I feel
like it's only my son that deals with this, so looking for any insight on ways
to best help him.
Thank you!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Dr. Hutten,
I am the mother of a nine-year-old
child. To Texas. The public education has not really worked out well and has
not addressed his problems. He has had increased anxiety over the last year. We
decided to move him out of the public education and found a small young private
school that seems to be working well but doesn't seem to target his social
skills problems. We are considering moving to Los Angeles Where if he found
could talk to school however where little hesitant. We got good job offers for
both my husband and I In LA. But it seems to be a big move for my family. What
do you think? in your opinion do schools and more services make a difference
for these children?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark, I am having a hard time
teaching my Asperger’s daughter (Amelia who is 11) basic personal
responsibility. Particularly, getting herself ready for school in the
mornings. We’ve tried visual aids (a chart with what she should be doing
at what times), prompting, we have maintained the same schedule since she began
pre-K at 5 years old (and even before that), reward charts if she does
everything herself, removal of TV/computer time if she needs continual
reminders, and up to letting her miss the bus and get dressed in the car on the
way to school. None of these things seem to make any difference, she gets
distracted ridiculously easy. We’ve gone so far as to remove all the
books and toys in her room (reading instead of doing what she is supposed to be
is a constant issue) to no avail, she simply finds something else to do.
It’s amazing what she can find to do. Needless to say, while it is better than
it used to be, she still has issues with time management. Is this
something that is just going to take more time and prompting? We are kind
of at a loss.
In addition, there’s the homework
thing. She is on Adderall XR to help with her attention issues, as well
as Risperdal for anxiety. She has a hard time focusing during class and,
so far this year (today is the 6th day of school), is already having
a hard time using her class time to do her classwork. This ends up
coming home as homework, in addition to the homework assigned for the
day. She had an aide in the classroom through 3rd grade (she
is in 5th this year), last year became challenging when her workload
increased about halfway through the year. I know she gets very
frustrated, and feels that she can’t handle all of this work that she is being
given. While I think that she should still complete the classwork as well
as the homework after school (because she didn’t use her time wisely
during class), it also seems like it may be too much for her. I’m pretty
sure she feels so frustrated and has decided she can’t handle it and shuts down
in school and doesn’t even try. The work itself is not particularly
difficult for her, she’s a smart kid. She does have an IEP, and I have
been communicating with her teacher to figure out how to reduce her workload so
that it is manageable while still making her accountable for her work. I guess
my question is….where exactly is the line between punishing her for her
disability (especially the extreme lack of focus) and making her accountable?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I first stumbled upon Mark Blakey’s
“Asperger’s Test Site”, featuring Professor Simon Baron Cohen’s AQ Test, the
first of August. Since then, I’ve read up considerably on Asperger’s, and
am completely convinced my 42-year-old gay partner is an Aspie.
I do substance abuse outreach work
with inmates, parolees, and probationers through Alcoholics Anonymous Hospitals
& Institutions Committee. 3 years ago, my partner wrote the local AA
Central Office for a sponsor / outside support, and his letter was given to
me. We wrote back and forth, and then I started visiting him in prison
every weekend. We kind of connected from the first letter, but it wasn’t
until he was released in March that I fully realized he was gay. (He knew
I am.) I brought him home with me to my mom’s place, and then we
got our own place, and have been in a relationship ever since. I’ve met his father once – a retired
chemical engineer – whom I suspect may also have Asperger’s. My partner,
Chris, was the 5th of 6 children. His mother died when he was
an infant. His dad later in life began taking Paxil for anxiety /
depression. I’ve heard horror stories from Chris about how his dad went
through ballistic melt-downs frequently when he was a kid, and even beat him up
so bad that he had to be placed in foster care for a year. Chris was a
Ritalin kid, and began smoking marijuana at 11, and acting out in school.
From there, there was a progression to hard drugs. A steady parade of
child psychologists, drug reahabs, mental institutions, more psych meds, and
harder street drugs then led to trouble with law enforcement, stays at juvenile
hall, jails and finally long stays in state prisons.
Over the 2-1/2 years I visited him
in prison, I noticed that he was moody, sometimes withdrawn, introverted,
uncomfortable in his dealing with others, and somewhat younger than his years
in social maturity. He did have trouble showing empathy, keeping eye
contact, and staying out of depression / anxiety. Pysch meds had never
really worked on him. He’d had trouble maintaining friendships and
relationships. You certainly know the pattern.
When I tried broaching the subject
of Asperger’s with him and showed him the self-diagnostic test, his reaction
was: “You think I’m a retard! I’ve always known I was
different. But there’s nothing wrong with me. I looked at the
self-diagnostic test and that website, and it was pure quackery!”
Somewhat down the road and he
brought up Asperger’s again, asking me if it helped me to put a label on his
situation, as if to categorize him.
He’s been incarcerated about 15 years
out of his life. He’s never really had much more than day labor, short
duration jobs. He’s been clean and sober about 3 years, starting just
before I met him, which is good. And he’s about ½ through his 1-year of
supervision upon prison release from Probation.
Areas where I seek your advice
1.
In your book, you did suggest
telling an adult about his apparent condition, encouraging him to seek
professional confirmation. If he’s in initial denial, do you have
suggestions of how to overcome that? In Alcoholics / Narcotics Anonymous,
the concept is about one alcoholic /addict (who knows from where he speaks)
helping another. Would it help having someone with Asperger’s from a
support group, etc. broach the subject with him, possibly minimizing the
perception of a “Normie” labeling him? My objective is for him to gain
understanding of himself, possibly see if there is some of this in his dad, and
facilitate understanding, healing, and coping through techniques and
training.
2.
He sleeps with a body pillow of a
Japanese anime cat character, which he talks to, plays with, and clings
to. I recognize that he doesn’t have to worry about abandonment, two-way
communication issues, and acceptance. He has stated that he has intimacy
issues, and there has been no intimacy or overt displays of affection between
us, but of course, I would like there to be. I have no problem with the
stuffed animals being part of the relationship; I would just like to be
included. This is something that apparently he has carried with him ever
since he was a child, and even in prison, he had a “Linus” blanket.
3.
We used to give each other a hug
every time I saw him and departed on the prison yard, but now that we live
together that’s stopped. I have taken to asking him for a hug, then I’ve
gotten them. Like asking permission if I can touch him is a strategy to
avoid his discomfort. Any suggestions?
4.
Mark Blakey and Leslie Burbey have
co-authored a book called “Emotional Master for Adults with Asperger’s”.
Are you familiar with it? I just got your book today, so have yet to
finish it.
5.
There are a couple of iPhone apps
I’ve come across – “Social Navigator” by Seven Minds Education, and “House
Rules” by Jodi Picault – that may be exercises mainly designed for autistic
kids. Once I get Chris to open up to the likelihood that he has
Asperger’s, and accept it, are there techniques / exercises you’d recommend to
deal with avoiding getting triggered into melt-downs and anger, and getting out
of it when it happens? Also to get out of anxiety, OCD episodes,
depression?
6.
Your book addresses hetero
relationships, where the Normie is the wife. Does that translate pretty well
to gay relationships, too? Do you have any specific lessons for gays?
Thank you so much in advance for
your time! I’m looking forward to studying the materials of yours I’ve
just accessed today!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My son has always been "difficult". From the time
he started prek Ive always received phone calls at least two times a week about
his behavior. When he was 10 his father committed suicide, at the age of 11 he
lost his vision and was diagnosed with brain cancer. He has been through
treatment and phycological testing. It was a nightmare getting him to receive
treatment. He is negative and yet he could be such an inspiration to others if
he had a positive outlook. His attitude is poor, hes angry, hes depressed and
hes only gotten worse. He is now 17, will be 18 in March. He doesnt want to do
anything that will help in getting him through this new life he was given. He
only does what he wants to, he isnt concerned about the next years of his life.
He assumes he will live with us forever. Todays phone call, his teacher said
they had an outing last night at a horse show. He had homework and instead of
doing it when they got back he went to bed early. This morning my son told the
teacher "I didn't do my work because it cut into my personal time" I
wanted to draw an make jewlery".
He always has that mindset of he can do what he wants and doesnt have to follow
rules. Always has had, no form of dicipline has helped. We are clueless what to
do. Drs have stated they have never seen anyone like him. Need some advice!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark, I have written to you before about your program.
It is so helpful. When I find myself in the throws of an all out
war with my 16 yo son, I reach for your ebook. Your emails always seem to
come at the most appropriate times, as well. I even find your information
and suggestions as well as those from other parents to be more helpful than the
visits to his Social Worker. I plan on checking out the Online Support Services
that I just read about. I'm afraid to ask how long they've been around
and I haven't noticed! Anyway - You are a Godsend!! Thank you for your
expertise at a price that all can afford! Diane
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hey Mark! I'm so thankful to have found your website. I am
currently struggling with getting the proper diagnosis for my four year old
son. He has been tested but given the label of ODD. We have been treating this
for several months with no improvement. He has actually been in therapy for
over a year with no improvement. We have tried Tennex, Zoloft, and now
Folcilan. ( I'm sure I didn't spell those right lol) still meds haven't helped.
The Folcilan has given us a little relief. He started kindergarten this year
and we are 4 weeks in and today was our first good day. He was already placed
in ISS his third week of school partially for violence but also for an
inappropriate word and drawing (breast) His therapist office is wanting me to
place him in a 28 day facility that will take him off meds and start from
scratch. I'm curious if this is a good idea. When I read the article on your
page about meltdowns it's exactly what I see. There are lots of other symptoms
too that I see. His therapist office feels he is autistic on the high
functioning side but say they are unable to diagnose. I would just appreciate
any help at all. Thank you!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In short, my son is diagnosed with ADHD – Inattentive type. “High
Functioning Autism” or “Asperger’s Tendencies" have been
tossed around by school and community psychologists. He is definitely defiant,
but it's more like ignoring rather than blatantly defying. He only gets
aggressive if I try to pressure him to do something. He definitely does not
intentionally annoy anyone as you describe with ODD. He doesn’t
choose to annoy people; he is just too busy with his own agenda to do anything
other than what interests him. This includes bathing, putting trash in
the trashcan, doing his schoolwork, etc.
My son will be 19 in less than a month and I am very worried about his
future. He has been in brick and mortar public school, and several
different virtual schools.
I would greatly appreciate if you could answer two questions for me.
1) Should I be taking him to a psychiatrist to be diagnosed or is there
some other approach to getting help for my child? He is on an IEP, but
academically, he is at or above his grade level even though he has completed very
little schoolwork since he was 9 years old. He is on the IEP because of
the ADHD diagnosis and “Asperger’s Tendencies” indicated by
the school psychologist.
2) Although he has not been diagnosed with ODD, I am thinking of taking
part in your OPS (Online Parenting Support) program. Does this make sense
with the things I have shared with you? I truly have tried everything
with him and if he doesn’t want to do something, he doesn’t care if
I ask nicely, yell, threaten, beg, or cry. He just seems to get annoyed
that I am bothering him with things he thinks are my problems.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark,
My daughter Sophia was diagnosed
in March this year with Aspergers when she was 4 and a half years old
and of all the sites I have visited on-line since then I have to tell
you how much I appreciate your site for all your wisdom you have in
providing parents the most valuable information on this subject. I love
reading your site and so appreciate the weekly emails.
My
family lives in Regina, SK Canada and I was wondering if you ever
travel here for conferences or have plans to, I would love to attend one
of your seminars.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hello Mark-
I recently came across your work on line. You are excellent. Clear, direct, knowledgeable. Excellent!
I am a therapist here in Boulder Co. I have worked with sexual abuse
for 30 years, both on the receiving end and teens who commit offenses.
I also have been working with teens with dx of Asperger's, PDD-NOS,
NLD, AD/HD. Two were referred to me bout 8 yrs ago after committing and
charged with a sexual offense.
I realized quickly that I had to take a VERY different approach with these guys.
Since then I have learned a good amount and move deeper into therapy for
ASD youth not necessarily in the juvenile justice system. Man, it is
so rewarding, fun and challenging.
Okay, I stated group work by accident. Had about 8 fellas for 1-2
years. One day I realized- maybe they want to meet each other! (I had
groups for AD/HD boys earlier in my career... can you imagine that! I do
agree they have plenty in common and the differences too).
I asked Will in our meeting- "Hey, would you be interested in meeting
another fella who experiences life and perspectives similar to you?"
"Okay"
The first day they met each other was amazing. Talk about connection!
"MenzGroup" (15-18yo) was born and has thrived for the past 2 years. We
have rituals, and rules, and snacks too. I stay away from all
clinical/psychological terminology (eg- social skills, social cues,
impulsive, oppositional...) to the best that I can. They have been
through so much by the time they reach this age, from torture by peers
and torture by professionals who want them to be different (normal).
They are immediately skeptical and ready to bolt when brought to see me
by their parents or P.O.s. I work with the families too, school
personnel, probation officers, psychiatrists, etc.
We talk about everything they want to talk about. They bring in their
models, class N trains, key collections, musical instruments, music
recordings...
We also use real life situations (at the store, at school, at home, with
sibling, parents. Plain 'ol out in the community situations. We role
play, set goals, practice good relationship building and maintaining
them.
I know I am going on and on, just setting the stage. We talk a lot
about sex; feelings, urges , masturbation, partners (I am more concerned
with healthy relationships than gender issues), fantasies and PORN.
Many people I come across in the field do NOT like to talk about this,
don't know how, avoid it, etc. Slowly, I am seeing, in the offender
treatment groups I am involved with, more talk and articles about these
teens who "commit sexual offenses" and how destructive it is when they
are charged and treated like a criminal. It does not work, is hugely
shaming and hurtful, and totally misses the important aspects of what is
really going on for that kid.
What have you experienced? I have a lot to say (and do say) about role of sex/porn for Asperger's guys, you?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
RE: Controlling son-in-law with Aspergers won't allow us to talk to our daughter, and our daughter goes along with it...
Hi Andy,
This is a
terribly unfortunate situation. I’m not sure this is fixable. My message here will
be short and simple:
You will
need to learn to “let go.” It would be a whole lot easier – and much less
painful – to simply beat your head against a brick wall than to continue living
this way. It’s beyond absurd!
Realize
and accept the fact that you are not going to change your son-in-law. The more you butt
heads with him, the more he will distance himself from you. I’m also very sure
that he has brainwashed your daughter (in the fullest sense of the term).
The harder
you try to bridge the gap, the more you are creating a gap. However, the
opposite may very well be true as well: the less you try, the more likely they
will narrow the gap. You are simply taking on too much responsibility for the
relationship – LESS IN BETTER RIGHT NOW!
Keep quiet
during tense situations. This requires major self-discipline. It may take some
time to acquire this skill. The last thing he wants to hear is that you think he
should do things differently. Also, I would stop all communication attempts
immediately. As long as you play by his rules – YOU LOSE!
Tell them
that you cannot continue to live this way. You respect the rules to his game,
but you are not willing to continue to play that game.
It’s just
that simple. If you make it more difficult than this, then you are back to square
one (again).
Give this
some time to work. It may take years for them to come around.
As you
doubt my advice (which you will), remind yourself that your way hasn’t worked
so far. The more you keep doing what doesn’t work, the harder it will be to
turn things around some day.
I wish I
had a better plan, but I’m sure a better plan is not available. You will do
well to trust me here and follow my advice.
This situation
is a lot like “trying” to sleep. When you can’t sleep, you try harder to get to
sleep, but the harder you try, the longer it takes to fall asleep. When you
stop “trying” to fall asleep, you drift off. Trying harder works against you.
The same will be true with your relationship to your daughter and son-in-law. Trying harder maintains
the gap.
Grieve the
loss of your daughter and son-in-law. Move on. Pray. Trust.
Mark
Hutten, M.A.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I have watched a number of your videos and really
enjoyed them. You seem to be one person who really gets it. While I
myself do not have Aspergers I believe my son Brian, my ex-husband Jason and my
Dad all seem to have Aspergers. Firstly my Dad. He is 76. He
has 0 friends. He is highly intelligent, esp in history. My parents
are still married. He is extremely socially awkward and appears unaware of
it. He has many many tics for lack of a better word. My Mom never
worked when we were kids so we were forced to accommodate his every whim.
My Mother also forced us into submission. I believe it was her way of
protecting us as the meltdowns were ugly. Imagine any adult that goes
through life and always gets his way. He has 0 friends. Secondly, my
ex. I always said everybody loves Jason. Spaz. Couldn't seem
to help himself. The dog was afraid of him. Also, very
intelligent. Very manipulative. When he didn't get his way firstly I
would get the silent treatment, followed by numerous threats and then it got
even uglier. I could of possibly worked it out with Jason if it weren't
for the inlaws from hell. I thought nothing positive would come from that
environment. I left. I always could look after myself. Lastly,
and most importantly Brian. I have 2 kids. One boy and a girl
Kelly. They are close in age, 25 and 23 and always have been and still are
very good friends. Brian is the older. I see no sign of Aspergers in
Kelly. At the moment they are both extremely angry at me. Brian was
playing his father and I off each other, this included the new wife as
well. At one time I told him I was happy he had 2 mothers as I could use
the help. That put a bit of a halt to that for awhile. He informed
me he was going to take Engineering and he and his girl would live with me for a
small fee. I told him I was proud he was going into Engineering and that if he
was smart enough to pass Engineering he was more than smart enough to figure out
how to pay for it. He is doing so at this time. He was 22 at that
time. The other one was asked to move out at 21. She was told
that if she is old enough for sex, she is old enough to pay her own hydro
bill. She now works and pays her own bills. I won't take anymore of
your time. I love my kids. They will come around because I know
they love me and they know I love them. I need help and advice so when they
come around I am ready. I have no family support. I am very open to
advice. Sincerely, Penny Yeomans PS, Brian was an oddly
exceptionally well behaved kid until I left his dad. He did suffer a lot
of depression. He doesn't drink or do drugs. He claims he is
allergic to alcohol. Thank-you Jesus is all I have to say about
that. There is too much to tell you. I will eventually get Brian in
to be assessed. He is very gifted in Math. He sees the world in
patterns. He was 16 months old when he was in the hosp for his
bladder. They, for whatever reason had a psychologist assess him and they
told me he was years ahead of himself in Math. They returned him to me
without fixing his bladder problem and I raged all the way home about the fact
he didn't talk, still pooped his pants and they were testing his Math
abilities. It goes on and on for years. Nobody ever mentioned the
word Autism. Thanks, Penny
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My husband and i are united in the battle to handle both our daughter’s
mental illness, as well as other medical issues; thus, years ago, we were able
to get the Power of Attorney for Property and Personal Health, plus
we had our daughter with us when we signed up for the Henson Trust.
In reference to our daughter running away, we had to interfere with our POA
at the bank that she dealt with. To the credit of this particular bank( not all
financial institutions are as accommodating),
we managed to cancel her account there and set up a joint account at
another financial institution. With this in place, we have control of any of her
incoming money, and she requires two signatures
to withdraw any money. We make sure that she has everything that she needs
and provide her with a modest amount of spending money each week.
Where we live, children need to attend school until age 16 according to
provincial law. Our daughter is in her late 30’s and on a disability pension,
but she is high functioning, to the point that I felt like a private-eye
in attempting to catch her to giver her the help that she needed.
Clinical depression information I obtained from my local mental health
office, where I served on the Board of Directors for eight years.
Electronic communications with all with whom I need to converse, is
my greatest aid.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
RE:
Organization
skills for autistic adults
Hello:
The
Special Education Service Agency has a grant program called the Alaska
Autism Resource Center (AARC), which provides information, referrals,
training and consultation for individuals on the autism spectrum, their
families, caregivers and service providers across the state of Alaska.
You can see more about the agency and the AARC at http://sesa.org.
Providing
information is a key component of the AARC mission, and one method the
program uses is information packets designed for parents, teachers and
paraprofessionals. These packets contain brochures, booklets and other
items that we have created or purchased through various organizations.
We estimate that we distribute 100 packets of each type every year. We
are exploring the concept of doing this packet as both a paper version,
and as a pen drive (with links, not necessarily full text).
We
are in the process of creating a packet that will have information
specifically for adults on the autism spectrum. We are gathering
information and articles, and we are interested in the above-referenced
article from your website.
We would like to include this article in the packet, for a total of 200 copies of each article over a two-year period.
Thank you so much for your consideration--
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hello Mark,
My
14yr old definitely has ODD -- Finally, a description to his behavior.
For years we (my husband and I) have been struggling w/Jeffrey's
behavior. This morning, a simple "No" turned into him telling me "F U"
throwing a sneaker at me. Saying he wasn't coming home on the bus and
will walk to where he wants to go after school, with or without my
permission. We are at our wits end with him. He walks around the
house cursing and knocking things over. Saying he doesn't care about
this or that. And never listens. He won't eat any meal outside of his
room. He rarely joins in on family functions. He
will destroy things without care. We went to therapists & doctor's
and honestly no one really get's him or understands what we are going
through. They tried to prescribe anti-depressants, but that is not the
answer we are looking for. We just want a caring child who behaves and
speaks appropriately.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I have just read your first book chapter. I am an MD and ENT here in
Colombia. I have a high suspition my 21 yo son has Aspergers, i have
been w many specialists for him but no one told me this could be the
problem.
At 9 yo he was tested for a IQ and it was 151 mostly by his language
abilities. Despite this fact, during teenage it was really a complete
challenging period for us as parents. Although he has improved a lot in
personal and social actitude still is struggling to find his career way.
We always come to the point of lack of interest or feel rejected by peers or confronting his teachers.
Now reading all this and going through a process of psycological
evaluation for pilot it scares me if this is a safe path for him to
pursue knowing the limitations he can have. This is my question for u
and if you believe it could be too dangerous for him.
On the other hand to thank you for this complete resource for us like parents of very particular kids.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Mr Hutten,
I live in Cardiff, UK, and purchased your book
"living with an Aspergers partner or spouse" after starting to experience
serious difficulties in my marriage. I now have an official diagnosis of "high
functioning autism" (Aspergers is no longer a recognised condition) coupled with
"adult attention deficit disorder". I found the book very helpful and it
explained most of the problems which I experienced in the marriage.
Unfortunately the marriage could not be saved
(although I tried as best I could) and my wife is now in the process of
divorcing me on the grounds of "unreasonable behaviour". She feels that my
behaviour is unlikely ever to change and that divorce is the best course to
take. There is little I can do now except cooperate. I do have two lovely
daughters who I see regularly.
However I am now looking to the future. I have met
a young woman (through a church choir) who has Aspergers. She has three children
who have all been taken away from her by social services as she has been deemed
unfit to look after them. They live with her ex-husband and she is rarely
allowed to see them. Her Father is dead and her Mother has disowned her.
Unfortunately she was taken advantage of by several men earlier this year and as
a result is expecting a baby in December. She does not even know at this stage
who the Father is. She is also in a great deal of debt. She has been told that
when her baby is born it will be taken away. She is in a desperate situation and
has nobody to support her. We get on well together and I am beginning to feel
that we could support each other, so I am wondering about the possibilty of us
getting together eventually. I am writing to ask your advice about this. Have you
come across such a relationship? Can such a relationship work, or would it be a
recipe for disaster? I am wary of becoming too involved as I am worried that
such a relationship would not work. I would be interested to hear any advice you
can give me on this.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Mark,
Firstly I wanted to say hi, I run the Aspergers Test Site and its always great to reach out to fellow bloggers.
Recently
one of the subscribers to the Aspergers Test Site mailing list
contacted you about broaching the possibility of Aspergers in their
partner. You gave him this quote:
"If
one has Aspergers, it is better to know than not to know. If you have
Aspergers and don’t know, it affects you anyway; if you do know, you can
minimize the negative impact and leverage the positive. Without the
knowledge that one has Aspergers, one often fills that void with other,
more damaging explanations such as failure, weird, disappointment, not
living up to one’s potential, etc."
I
wondered if you would give me permission to quote you in an article, im
writing about how to broach the issue of getting an Aspergers Diagnosis
with a loved one?
Also
I noticed you have several books. Would you be interested in doing a
cross promotion with your mailing list. I have one book for adults with
Aspergers and I also run a magazine called Autism Parenting Magazine and
we are always looking for new readers. Let me know your thoughts.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark,
I
have been enjoying the wit and wisdom in your podcast on Parenting
Defiant Asperger Teens. I had been looking for assistance for my teens
to be able to interact more meaningfully with my new 16yo step-son who
was diagnosed with Aspergers in his early primary school years.
A
happy upshot of finding your podcasts available online today was that
listening to them I was struck by how similar the outbursts were to my
step-daughter's. Her behaviours of concern have been escalating since
we announced our engagement in February this year. We thought things
were going fairly well until escalating again recently. Alot of the
very words you use in examples of parents and the adolescent are word
for word.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My
younger son Mario, who just turned seven last week, has recently been
diagnosed with being on the autism spectrum. (As I'm sure you know, the
new DSMV has changed yet again, and aspergers syndrome is now
generalized back under the autism
diagnosis.) I am facing a neglect charge in the state of Maine with
the Department of Health and Human Services, (DHHS), partially due to
my son Mario's behaviors. (I'm opposing the negligence charge) As far as they are concerned, I am being negligent as I cannot manage his behaviors. Additionally, I have an older son Sal who turned 10 in June, whom often targeted Mario
with aggression, due to the fact that he thought I was favoring his
younger brother. As I've said previously, I have sent a link from your
newsletter to my lawyer, so he can also understand the autism factor,
especially in dealing with behaviors. With luck, he will be able to
take some of your knowledge and present it to the court in such a way
that they can also
understand. I'm a year out of an abusive 15 year marriage that both my
children have suffered from in various ways. Instead
of going into much more detail, I'll end my explanation here.
I'm
not looking for pity nor for judgment, but actual help that I can use
to better my situation with myself and my boys and to bring them home. I
have tried several programs with social services, however because of
cutbacks and insurance issues, (my children weren't progressing quickly
enough), they were not as helpful as they could have been. Your book
and your website, along with all the things I keep discovering on it
have been helpful to me.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My husband and I live in Johannesburg, South Africa and have not
been able to find many resources here that can help us and now our
situation has become very serious in the sense that we are both
completely exhausted and quite frankly I, personally, am for the first
time feeling hopeless that our situation will improve or work out. Let
me explain briefly.
We took 4 year old twin
sisters in foster care in May 2010 (about 3,5 year ago) who turned 5
years old about a month after they came to live with us. Until that time
they had spent their whole life in an orphanage. Therefore they suffer
from Reactive Attachment Disorder and are very affected by being
institutionalised for so long. They have also been diagnosed with ADHD
and anxiety but there is not much awareness of RAD here and therefore
that is something we have learned about ourselves from the internet but
the girls show a number of the symptoms.
This
year has been particularly difficult but the girls started primary
school last year and are repeating Grade 1 this year (which I am not
surprised about due to their background) but initially they seemed to be
doing ok in the mainstream school with the extra support available
(extra reading etc). However the one girl – who has always been a bit
more naughty started getting into trouble the second half of last year
for steeling etc. at school. This started again early this year and in
March I had to go and see the principle and the result was that we
transferred her to a special boarding school (boarding from Monday to Friday) which is for children with severe behavioural issues (and is familiar with attachment disorder).
The
other girl who stayed at home (because her history has not been as
"bad") and continued in her normal school started acting out in July
(after we came back from overseas where we visited my family for a
month) and has now burnt all bridges and is going to join her sister in
the boarding school in the beginning of October which will hopefully
give my husband and my self (and our 4 year old son and my husbands 12
year old son who sometimes stays with us) some break and enable us to
handle the girls better when they come home over the weekend.
This
is only a brief introduction and of course a lot of information missing
but the reason for the urgency is that the girls are in our foster care
and the contract will be up for a renewal in June next year and the way
I'm feeling at the moment is that we should not renew because I feel
the girls are beyond any further help. And that brings the whole guilt
of bringing more rejection on the girls on top of all the other issues
they are dealing with – in addition to the heart brake it will cause our
sons, us and the rest of our family and friends that have learned to
love the girl over the past years.
Since we
are taking the action of sending the other girl to join her sister at
the boarding school I'm hoping that we will manage to get some clarity
on the situation (and regain some of our sanity) but I feel like we
need some serious assistance to help us make the right decision or at
least to take steps in the right direction for all of us.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Thank you for all the information that I received from about Aspergers. Do you have any information like the one you provide in English for
Spanish Speaking parents? I work at a school and we have several
parents with Asperger's kids and would like to get more information like
the one you provide in English. I will really appreciate your respond
on this. Thank you for all you do!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark- I subscribe to your newsletter and read it
religiously. So much of the advice you offer applies directly to our
life with our 10 year old son, Jonah, who was diagnosed with Aspergers
and ADHD when he was 6 years old. I am very appreciative of the
expertise you offer weekly!
Jonah has been in a weekly Social Skills Group
through a local private organization that specializes in Autism since
his diagnosis, and also participates in a Social Skills Group once a
week at school, as part of his IEP. Socially, he is doing very well.
He has lots of friends and prefers, above all else, to spend time with
them.
Jonah excels academically and participates in the
Gifted and Talented program at his school. He always scores very highly
on standardized tests, and gets good grades on his report card in all
areas, with the exception of organization.
Jonah is in fifth grade now, and where we have
struggled with him since he began school, is with homework. As the
years have gone on and school has gotten more fast-paced, the struggles
have progressively gotten worse. Each evening when we finally get him
to sit down at the table to start his homework after MUCH effort on our
part to even get him to the table, he screams and cries and whines
saying "I can't do it. It's too hard. Why are you making me do this?"
etc. Once he finally calms down, after 15-20 minutes of crying, my
husband or I have to sit with him the entire time in order for him to
complete the assignments. He is perfectly capable of doing the work and
often when he gets started he finds that it is actually quite easy for
him. Getting him to that point, however, is a knock-down-drag-out
battle. Night after night, this happens and my husband and I are
exhausted. Middle school starts next year, and we are terrified of what
that will bring to the homework struggle.
Jonah has always had issues with anything that seems
even remotely difficult to him, as he expects perfection immediately.
I suspect this is what the issue is with homework, as well, but I am at
a loss with how to get him past this. Any advice you can offer is much appreciated. Thank you, Mark!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hi Mark,
I
apologise in advance, because I'm certain this will be a very long
email. But I am hoping you are able to help me, I am extremely
desperate. I will start from present and work my way back in time.
I
have lost my 13 1/2 year old son, Brodie ! I have only seen him for
three days out of this month of September, and that was 3 weeks ago. He
is with his father by his own choice and does not wish to come home, nor
even to see me or his sister. I have had some telephone contact with
him, but not terribly positive, he usually answers my call, not by
saying "hello mum", but "yeah". And I usually end up in tears because he
tells me and his sister, he does not want to see us and is not ready to
yet. And his father is not helping the situation either, re enforcing
to him that, it's ok you are fine with me, mum can't make you go home or
do anything you don't want to do, you don't have to see her if you
don't want to, I will not force you to, and she can't get the cops to
take you home either. I don't think he is even encouraging Brodie to
want to see me. I have had a mental heath plan done for Brodie to attend
a psychologist as well, but he refuses to go, and cannot understand
that this is part of the solution for all of us to understand, function
and get better.
Brodie
has an Auditory Processing Disorder, as well as Dyslexia and bad
Working Memory. He has not been formally diagnosed with Asperger's, but
I think at the time when testing was done, which was quite a few years
ago, he did not have enough signs. But since the onset of puberty, and
especially lately more have become apparent. With fixation on gaming,
nothing else matters, his lack of emotion, to show empathy or understand
feelings, and to have massive meltdowns over the smallest things,and or
not getting his way, and other symptoms.
I
have always had my children do chores, and have to moreso now, due to
myself now having a physical disability, and being a single parent as
well. But I think it teaches them to be self sufficient as well. They
are written up on a roster, and reward of electronics come afterward if
they are done. Brodie does not like this and a lot of the time he will
attempt, but does not finish. His father however, refuses to do such a
schedule, and has never made Brodie do anything. I also have a locked
door room for the electronics to be kept. I have always been firm with
my "no" can't have, and do not give in.
Due
to having a 2 storey house, and unable to repeatedly go up and down
stairs to call Brodie, I am required to yell out to him from downstairs,
but also loud enough through his closed door. And sometimes I do get
frustrated and yell (raise my voice)to him, like to get out of bed 5,6,7
times or more in the morning to go to school.
His
father has not played an active role in his life or been interested in
it much. Just has had Brodie every other weekend. It has been me that
has taken care of him, all his medical, testing, specialists,
schooling, including bulling issues in previous years. He has no
understanding of Brodie's disability, and thinks something is wrong with
him, why he doesn't get stuff, and wants to toughen him up ! He think's
Brodie is too much of a "soft cock", as he says. And has told me people
say to him, "what's wrong with Brodie", as in, him being withdrawn an
not wanting to socialise and try new things. I have to keep reminding
him I have been trying for years to make Brodie self sufficient, but
like lots of things said, falls on deaf ears.
Brodie
has indicated for a while he would like to spend more time with his
father. His father however has his own bachelor lifestyle, and
repeatedly said it would be too inconvenient for Brodie to live with
him. We did do a trial of week about, and Brodie liked that, and wanted
it, but I ended it, due to knowing his father did not really want it,
and his father's residence, which was him still sharing a house with his
ex of 4 yrs and someone else as well. Him and the ex get verbally
abusive with each other, and I did not want Brodie around that, nor do I
want him to think it is acceptable for men to speak to women in that
manner. Brodie resumed living again at home with then back to only
seeing his father again every second weekend, which eventually flared up
again, because he didn't like it, and having to do chores etc. what he
does at home, would have an anger tantrum grab the ph and call his
father and have a meltdown, and said he can't handle it anymore.
Brodie
has threatened to runaway from home as well, and did during the last
school holidays, but returned after a few hours. I do not want him to do
this again, I have not insisted his father bring him home against his
will for fear he will do this, as I want Brodie safe as well. Brodie has
no problem with doing what his father asks, including getting out of
bed early in the morning for school apparently ! As his father gloats to
me ! But I try to get through to him that of course Brodie is, because
he wants to be good for him so he can stay with him ! Brodie's father
has always used me as punishment, saying to Brodie, if he does not do as
he is told or what his father wants to do then "I'll take you home to
your mother ". And same in this case.
Brodie's
father and myself were only together for 18 months out of Brodie's
life, and separated when Brodie was about 4 yrs of age. We have no legal
parenting orders in place as we have always been amicable with access
arrangements with Brodie.
My
friends have advised me to wait it out, saying his father will grow
tired of the situation and Brodie will slip up sometime with trying to
please his father. But I don't know if I can, it is killing me not
seeing him or being able to hug and kiss him. I love him so much and
miss him so much. And so does his sister.
I
desperately need your help ! I don't know what to do ! I don't know
what I can do to get Brodie back, or to get him to want to talk to me or
let me see him. I find myself writing this email to you at 1.30am in the morning after lying in bed crying, not able to get to sleep.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Your description of the SPD fits my 6 year old girl perfectly. Your
research into the matter is very complex and in depth, and it helped me
tremendously to understand her. We live in Northern Virginia area, and I
was trying to find a good speech pathologist/therapist who could
officially diagnose her and work with her. If you have any
recommendation I would greatly appreciate it. And also, could you point
me towards resources/studies that I could read and inform myself as
well. I need and I want to help her so much, if I could find the right
way to do it.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Beginning
many years ago, my son, who was adopted from Russia, was very attached
to his blankets. At first, we weren't concerned, thinking that the
blankets merely offered comfort to him, comfort that he didn't get as a
baby in an orphanage. Starting last year, at just about the same time
as my husband was diagnosed with brain cancer, this "attachment" took on
a much more of an obsession than merely an attachment. Over the past
year, he has stolen blankets from my next door neighbor, a friend (when
we stayed overnight at her house), from our church, from a fellow Boy
Scout on a campout, from a skiing lodge when the Scouts went skiing,
from a mission trip location, and finally right before my husband passed
away, from a neighbor's house (someone he didn't even know) in the
middle of the night. He was brought home in a police car, in handcuffs.
He was charged with a felony and tresspassing. For several months he
had to wear an ankle monitor, but when we went to court, the judge
ordered him to go to a residential treatment facility. He had been
seeing a psychiatrist and psychologist regularly during ALL of these
things, seemingly to no avail. Of course, now that he is in a
residential treatment facility, the opportunity to steal blankets simply
does not exist. The treatment team thinks he is making great progress
and he may return home next month. I have had a security system
installed, but I am petrified that he still has the obsession. Our
psychiatrist told me that obsessions are the hardest to "cure." He has
already been told by our lawyer that IF this behavior cannot be
controlled, he will most likely end up in prison OR shot as an intruder
into someone's home.
I
just do not know what to do. We probably have 10-15 blankets in our
home that he can have, but the need for a "different" one seems to be so
deep rooted, most likely due to the lack of bonding and cuddling that
he did not get as a baby. Would hypnosis work? ANY suggestions you
have to offer would be most welcome. I have read your articles with
great interest for about 18 months now, but I have never seen any issue
such as ours.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
We are struggling
more with Meltdowns at school. Oh, we have them at school and at church
occasionally but my bigger concern is with school. My child
ranges more as a High Functioning Autistic child (the school once
referred to him as Asperger's) but I think he is a little
more significant than that. As he doesn't have the language skill set
that most Asperger's children seem to have. Do you think that your
program could help with him not having meltdowns at school??
As
that is where I am at the end of my rope, as you know if these
behaviors are too much they will say he is not in his least restrictive
environment and move him to be with students that are much lower
functioning than he is.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
My grandson age 9 for the last 4.yrs has had a challenging time. Dr
appts assessments , rx and change in rx. Last year his trouble really
ramped up at school. Before the year was out, he was moved to a smaller
school. Already last week he had such a violent situation they won't
allow him back until , well his mom is not sure. The social worker came
explained to him that he will be temporarily home schooled 2 hrs a day
in a public place and attend a 3 hr per day class designed for his
situation . My daughter is ok with the 3 hr class she wanted him in
there last yr, but the school assured her they could handle it, how this
is where she is at. The social worker advised her they could even
press charges on him for his violent reaction but that they would not .
My daughter is frustrated with that for she feels both her and my
grandson are being treated unfairly. However my one question is, he does
very very well in all situations but at school where neither her or I
are at. We don't have much issue with him at home , errands , playing
with friends etc .
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Hello, I have sent you a few emails over the last few years. I am
starting (for the second time) your online book I purchased - my
aspergers child even though the last counselor told me my child has full
blown narcissism and not aspergers. I don't know what else to do. I
sit here reduced to tears because all I do is yell at my child and I
really don't want to be around him. I just torture myself with guilt,
but I really don't want to be anywhere near him. I had him live with my
sister for about 9 moths and that gave my family a break. (my sister
now understands what I go through and she by herself had a very
difficult time with him but at least there were no other kids around
that he could torture) My younger son got a much needed break. He went
from throwing up 2 or 3 times a week to not throwing up at all.
Now here I sit still not knowing how to handle my child. And my younger
child is having the same physical signs of stress. My older child is
verbally brutal and spews venom. Last time I tried the book, it - I
don't know just didn't work. I mean I didn't stay with it. So I am
trying it again. I am not the best reader.
My child with whatever he has is perplexed as to why others are mad at
him or offended by him even though I go to great lengths and explain in
great detail why they are mad at him. I have to scream so loud it hurts
my throat to get him to realize the impact of his behavior on others.
And as I'm sure you already know, I am not very nice to him. I tell
him I don't want to talk to him at all. And I tell him why and we
always have two very different versions of events that occurred.
It's very hard for me to sit and read, but maybe I can do it this time.
My son is 14-years-old, a freshman, he has good grades and lots of
friends,(although I suspect if anyone of them had to do any work with
him regularly he would lose some of them),he breaks something in the
house about once a week and he is clumsy. I divorced his dad who gave
my son the same gene that he had. He has since died from what is most
likely effects of drug and alcohol abuse. I can't divorce my son. I am
just wiped out. I won't even get started on why my current husband
thinks.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
I have a 15 year old son with asperger's who has the most incredible
anger issues. He is receiving counselling, but none of the strategies
they give us seem to make any difference!
The problem is there is never any warning of when his anger will erupt
and therefore no time to prevent it happening! There are also no
specific triggers! It can be anything from something happening at
school, his brother annoying him (just by breathing!), or me!
He is very, very abusive and calls me the most disgusting names, afterwards he is always devastated and extremely remorseful! I am at my wits end with worry for him and total exhaustion for me! He is very intelligent and has a very good insight into his condition, I think this is sometimes to his detriment!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Dear Mark,
I am in the midst of legal proceedings to finally sorting out my sons contact with me.
Whilst I recently got more Direct Contact with him via a court order. My
EX was furious with, (as she tried in court to reduce ALL my contact).
But as the In Direct contact was by agreement between us, she acted
unilaterally and reduced it to 17% of what it was before the hearing. It
is obvious that she did this to punish me for getting more Direct
Contact with our AS son.
I am now seeking via the court that the original in direct contact
be reinstated. My Ex is now telling the court that it is in our son's
"best interests" to have such a little amount of In Direct contact with
me, despite our son saying he wants more contact, both; Direct and In
Direct. I need some scientific data to support my position, so I get to
speak to my son daily, as opposed twice a week as she allows now.
She refuses to allow him his own phone or let him take his iPad with
him (so he could skype me) so any In Direct contact is always
controlled through her.
Additionally, with his AS, routine
is important to him. Even though we had established a daily routine for
over two and half years, she disregarded it in the blink of an eye to
get back at me for her perception that I "won" in court.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~