Help with relationships

This is sort of related (please excuse the pun) to my previous thread.

Anyone know where I can get any help with relationship please? It was discussed with my former social worker last year; but social services won't deal with me now. They don't understand my issues and have decided that they can't be bothered to help me.

There are a few issues regarding relationships that I really need help with.

Parents
  • Ah well, it is at the Imperial Hotel, Russell Square in london, upwards of £92 a night single without breakfast, £145 executive rate with breakfast thrown in.

    So although that's for a conference suite for training purposes I bet the room hire is a big portion of the £125. Not that a university venue in London would be that much cheaper, but the point is Russell Square is easily accessible from main line stations. To use a charity office training room could be cheaper but might be harder to get to.

    Then there's what you'll learn from this, if you take the moderator's advioce and go along. 

    You'll get to understand the feelings and physical responses of people with autism in sexual relationships, and increase your understanding of the different levels of their interest in sex (what it says in the blurb!). You'll also understand the social challenges involved in initiating and maintaining sexual relationships for people on the autistic spectrum and develop skills in supporting auties to do this.

    Now the second part of that fits in with my understanding that this is difficult for people right across the spectrum, but the first part sounds a little bit too anthropological for me (maybe we need someone like David Attenborough) - either this is a load of rubbish or we're talking about people with very marked autism who really would have difficulties.

    Otherwise, I'm trying to get my head around what aspects of autism affect physical responses, unless we are talking about sensory issues, or what are these "levels of interest"?

    So I guess the rest of the cost lies in some expensive visual aids, perhaps some naked demonstrators or some exotic (or erotic) foods.

    To be honest a lot of conferences are for excutives - people in the health service, or education, or businesses - who go to these things ostensibly to learn what to do to inform their staff (who wouldn't get to go) - and who therefore expect to pay that sort of price and get a nice buffet nosh and decent coffee breaks with individually wrapped biccies thrown in.

Reply
  • Ah well, it is at the Imperial Hotel, Russell Square in london, upwards of £92 a night single without breakfast, £145 executive rate with breakfast thrown in.

    So although that's for a conference suite for training purposes I bet the room hire is a big portion of the £125. Not that a university venue in London would be that much cheaper, but the point is Russell Square is easily accessible from main line stations. To use a charity office training room could be cheaper but might be harder to get to.

    Then there's what you'll learn from this, if you take the moderator's advioce and go along. 

    You'll get to understand the feelings and physical responses of people with autism in sexual relationships, and increase your understanding of the different levels of their interest in sex (what it says in the blurb!). You'll also understand the social challenges involved in initiating and maintaining sexual relationships for people on the autistic spectrum and develop skills in supporting auties to do this.

    Now the second part of that fits in with my understanding that this is difficult for people right across the spectrum, but the first part sounds a little bit too anthropological for me (maybe we need someone like David Attenborough) - either this is a load of rubbish or we're talking about people with very marked autism who really would have difficulties.

    Otherwise, I'm trying to get my head around what aspects of autism affect physical responses, unless we are talking about sensory issues, or what are these "levels of interest"?

    So I guess the rest of the cost lies in some expensive visual aids, perhaps some naked demonstrators or some exotic (or erotic) foods.

    To be honest a lot of conferences are for excutives - people in the health service, or education, or businesses - who go to these things ostensibly to learn what to do to inform their staff (who wouldn't get to go) - and who therefore expect to pay that sort of price and get a nice buffet nosh and decent coffee breaks with individually wrapped biccies thrown in.

Children
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