Hi. I have a new question. This is the first year that DS won't be attending some sort of day or sleepaway camp. DS is done with his junior year of high school and is taking a college course at a local university for 3 hours per day. That leaves the rest of the day to sit in his room on his computer. He does go to fencing, karate and guitar lessons, but he does not socialize at all. He says he never feels lonely, but I don't feel good about his spending 8-10 hours a day in his room online. DS has some virtual friendships with people who share his interest in video gaming, but that is it. He gets along with kids in his class and in the anime and tech clubs at his school, but will not contact them outside of school. I suspect they are as shy as DS is, so they don't contact him. I wanted DS to go to a GRASP group for teens today on relationships (Global and Regional Asperger Syndrome Partnership) because I thought he might relate to what the kids there have to say. His therapist was on board with this idea as well. He is refusing because he says he doesn't feel the same as other autistic kids and he thinks he is "handling" his autism. (DH is backing up DS's opinion.) In fairness to DS, he does seem like a fairly typical teen and most people tell me they would never have guessed that he is on the spectrum at this point. They just think he's quiet. In the past, I have signed him up for socialization groups that were helpful and attended by kids who were similar, but there have been a couple of groups in which the other kids were obviously far more disabled than he was and he felt uncomfortable as a result. That is why he is avoiding the GRASP group, even though he's never been there. DH thinks we should try to involve him in volunteer work, but there don't seem to be many opportunities in our community during the summer. I don't believe DS is employable yet, in spite of his presenting like someone neurotypical most of the time. Furthermore, he is still working on his driver's license. Every other summer DS has made amazing strides which I have attributed, at least partially, to the forced socialization opportunities at summer camp. I don't want this to be the summer that he turns into a hermit. Does anyone have any suggestions? Thanks.
Toody, when did my DS move in with you?Seriously, we seem to just about have the same kid, except mine must be a year or so younger. He's 3 days from the end of his last day camp program, and he also will simply glue himself to a computer for days on end if we let him. (His current fixation is Portal2.)
He is also resistant to groups because he really doesn't deal well with kids who are still prone to meltdowns; he considers them very "other", so to speak, and resents the implication that he might be like them. We've got a new group here that I want to get him into, but there is a HUGE waiting list. This one is specifically for fully-mainstream high school kids, and is a social outing group. It's run by an occupational therapy professor at one of our local medical schools; she has her students go places with the ASD kids and intervene to coach them on social interactions as they happen. (Apparently, the most common questions have to do with how to successfully chat up girls.)
Our compromise is that we do let him have his comfort zone on the computer for a couple of weeks at a time, but he'll be volunteering off and on to break that up; he has a school requirement to do so, so it's kind of tough noogies if he doesn't want to. The other thing we have done is to buy him a transit pass so that he can go to the community pool to swim on his own; he meets up with classmates from school or camp there occasionally. (He doesn't contact classmates outside of school, either, but he does monitor their FB pages, so most of the time he knows where they are likely to be found if he wants to find them.)
NotUrsula---That is too funny. We have Portal2! DS loved it, but has now moved on to the Persona games. DS is just about done with his college course. The second course he's taking is also in audio engineering, but it won't require as much work outside of school...more time for video games and hanging out online. I wish DS had interest in his classmates' FB pages. He has an account but never uses it. He is more interested in Twitter, but the people he follows aren't friends. They are gamers with similar interests, but of all different ages and from all over the country. I've been trying to get him out of the house with me. I took him to the movies earlier in the week and we're taking him to a churruscuria on Saturday night. A video game center is opening in the middle of our town. I suggested he consider applying for a job when it starts up. He didn't say no, which in DS' case is the equivalent of an emphatic "yes."
(On the way home from camp a couple of days ago we had a telling discussion of the concept of a frenemy. At first he just kept harping on it being an oxymoron, until I reminded him of a few betrayals he's been the victim of in the past. Ah, the light dawns...)
Imagine that mother's life - and her kid has Cystic Fibrosis too - and she works full-time - and her husband tried to kill himself recently - that's me!
I haven't read this whole thread, but as a parent of a child with ADD, I want to give everyone that is exhausted from parenting a differently-abled child a big group hug. I wish you all peace.