Son has refused the assessment

Well, the CPN and woman from the autism team came in the front door and our son escaped out the back!  He had initially agreed to the assessment but, he says, only because he felt that the psychiatrist was too insistant and he felt coerced.  And now he's saying he doesn't want it, he won't see them and it's his decision.  The trouble is, we have to live with the consequences of his decision too.  He's mucky, withdrawn and spends all day in ritualistic behaviours to avoid "negative energy" or else on his computer.  He also quite frequently blanks us and rarely goes out.  No friends and no contacts over the phone or internet either.  There's a real atmosphere in our home and, even if he insists that what he's doing is more likely to make him happy, I think he is making himself, and the rest of us, very miserable indeed.

Of course, we are running into issues around mental capacity here.  The psychiatrist insists that he has capacity and we, of course, would always want to promote autonomy and independence where possible.  But to us it seems that he is in the grip of delusional beliefs and that, without the effects of possible autism plus associated mental illness through years of non recognition of this, he certainly wouldn't be choosing to spend his life like this!  What on earth can we do?  He seems to be using his capacity to ruin his life and ours too!   

Parents
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    Longman's post prompted me to go back and read your earlier posts. your son's behaviour is typical of some of the other posters on the forum who go into reclusive states as they are unable to cope with the world. He is incoherent in attempting to explain himself, talks about negative energy is a way that makes no sense to you but that doesn't make him mad. It'll make him infuriating to deal with and it won't make sense to you but it soesn't necessarily mean much.

    How did you get on with the Dummies book? Did it resonate with your own experience or with your son's behaviour?

    Perhaps it might benefit your relations with him if you took your other books about psychiatry out of the house. It sounds like he isn't thriving in the current atmosphere - perhaps he might respond to a change of approach? Are there any other family members or friends that he relates to at all?

Reply
  • Former Member
    Former Member

    Longman's post prompted me to go back and read your earlier posts. your son's behaviour is typical of some of the other posters on the forum who go into reclusive states as they are unable to cope with the world. He is incoherent in attempting to explain himself, talks about negative energy is a way that makes no sense to you but that doesn't make him mad. It'll make him infuriating to deal with and it won't make sense to you but it soesn't necessarily mean much.

    How did you get on with the Dummies book? Did it resonate with your own experience or with your son's behaviour?

    Perhaps it might benefit your relations with him if you took your other books about psychiatry out of the house. It sounds like he isn't thriving in the current atmosphere - perhaps he might respond to a change of approach? Are there any other family members or friends that he relates to at all?

Children
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