Hi, Late 20s autistic child

Hi there,

I am Dad to a late 20s autistic child.  They came out of school at 9 when they had a meltdown over the teacher wanting to define the shape of their work tasks.  I already home educated their sisters so that wasnt a problem for us.  I ran a commmunity centre  / local venue when they were a teenager and so taught them to run the PA, and work as audiovisual / IT technician part time.  When I left London they were 18 so decided to stay on with the other families they knew well from the centre and we found lovely digs with a local single mum.  I subsidised their living costs as finding additional work was clearly a big challenge.  I thought they would just mature and grow into the skills needed to move on into work for other venues, but the social barriers were too high to overcome.  After several years I didnt want to subsidise London costs any more so they joined me and Mum in the south west where we have a sort of granny annex that provides perfect adjacent living accommodation.  Finding work is too challenging for them due to the social stress, studying is not interesting enough and has no clear end goal since it just leads to the scary work, and motivations are too muddled for self motivation. House chores and self care are a real effort and uncomfortable struggle.  They study endlessly, following their own interests, and have a real flair for self analysis, all things to do with sound and music production.  Their autistic superpower is a huge sensory bias towards sound, and they would make the worlds best film soundtrack engineer if they could do it in an isolated bubble not requiring any social interaction with the rest of the team.  They are highly intelligent, highly articulate, intensely kind, moral, and warm, with an enormous interest in psychology and the mind.  When they were in London they gave their landlady very sound relationship counselling support and would love to pursue counselling or therapy as a career, but the barriers seem overwhelming.  They stumbled into awareness of their autistic traits at 20 when an online autistic friend pointed them out.  In the intervening time I came to terms with the fact that they werent going to grow out of these difficulties in the same way I did.  I have some autistic traits that I have managed to work around and reach a stable happy adult state, but their traits are much more intrusive causing various patterns of anxiety, frustration, anger and meltdown.  My wife has autistic traits somewhere between mine and his, and also has never worked for an employer for more than a month or two at a time.  So it hasnt been too big a change for me to realise that I adopted one semi-self-sufficient adult, but that has resulted in another one coming in the package .Joy They each have a directness and supportiveness and a unique creativity of thought that I would not give up for the world.

I am here to explore what happens next with my adult child.  To date I support them out of my own income, which is manageable.  But at the same time I want them to be known to the system for three reasons, (besides the possibilty that they might be able to pay for their own upkeep Wink).  One of course is that at some time in the future I wont be here, and they may still need some kind of support.  The second is that if they enter further education then a recognised disability can be real help.  One of my daughters has a mental health diagnosis, and there are times at university (she has 3 degrees and is now on her PhD) when it takes all the pressure off to just wave the flag and ask for some allowance for her increased difficulty with performing reliably.  The final reason is that without an ESA claim they are not accruing pension credits.  But getting an ESA claim involves starting a debate with the "system" as to why they are not in employment and training.  Up until now I have shied away from pushing at that door because I know how difficult dealing with agencies can be.  They talked to the GP about a diagnosis and got a discouraging "Its very hard to diagnose with an adult".   I am not sure where we go next.  Does a diagnosis make it easier to get registered with the ESA side of things?  Is there council support arising from the Autism Act to smooth the contact with ESA?  Or does it work out alright just to go straight for an unmployment claim and declare unconfirmed ASD diagnosis which makes going to interviews and training impossible?  All advice greatly appreciated

Anyway thanks to everyone here who moderates, and provides support and advice.  I worked as a home education advocate for a decade and know how much hard work it can be.


Parents
  • I work in sound. While I have encountered some barriers with organising files and networking, I have found ways to manage & have a few long-term relationships which have been substantial.

    In my experience, Sound Editing is a great job for individuals who even appear autistic. As is Mixing.  What I really want to stress is you must spend time mastering Pro Tools software. There is an educational version, but ti doesn't have the same capacity as the full version, but the student version is good to try out. But to work as a freelance human in this industry requires an investment of finances. I'd work on a Mac. And research which version (they are not always up to date) is compatible with Pro Tools. A laptop + ports will be needed as you'll need a "key" to operate most software and those keys are USB. Then you'll need a few compatible* hard drives to always run sessions on externally. A good pair of headphones (like BDPros which BBC seem to use) to begin and eventually a pair of decent monitors (KRK 5's) + an interface when you start recording.

    If he was more interested in making music (Music Producing), I think Ableton (software) is a little more enjoyable. For instance, does he hear something on Instagram or in a commercial and think these back ground elements would be fun to create? If so, Ableton is a more creative 'tool' / programme and comes with a lot of free plug-ins and sounds at the basic cost. There are a lot of music production libraries which I think can be quite good for individuals like myself who have social issues. www.prsformusic.com/.../using-production-music

    Music Producers are required to act like psychologists at times. In a studio setting, it's a more Creative role like a film director. The Engineer and Mix Engineer is concerned with the physics and electronics, though many days a Producer must do it all. A Production sound team for a film or post production house could be great. It's a hyper-focused and detailed job. For this he could start out working for free with student films. I'd do some research on what equipment he would eventually need to invest in, but I think students will have access to equipment. 

    Have a look at the libraries & peel though their sounds and albums. If he'd like to create, this could be a good route. Research what a sound team does behind the scenes for film or in a Post house. because most sound editors and mixers spend time in their own room or one-on-one, it can be a good job. 

    By the way, you're welcome to friend me & ask anything further. I'm posting this for anyone else interested!

  • Yeah - a home studio is not that expensive to set up any more - I've just sold all of my stuff - all the synths, effects, mixers and cabling and everything else.      The software is affordable and there's lots of free plugins to download.    I recommend a Mac too - PCs are just painful for any kind of media production.   My friend swears by his 2008 i-book - he says it does everything he needs for a portable studio.

    Something else to look at is Youtube content producers - they often need a good team behind them to edit video and maintain their web presence - it's convenient home-working income.

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  • Yeah - a home studio is not that expensive to set up any more - I've just sold all of my stuff - all the synths, effects, mixers and cabling and everything else.      The software is affordable and there's lots of free plugins to download.    I recommend a Mac too - PCs are just painful for any kind of media production.   My friend swears by his 2008 i-book - he says it does everything he needs for a portable studio.

    Something else to look at is Youtube content producers - they often need a good team behind them to edit video and maintain their web presence - it's convenient home-working income.

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