Help needed please.

We have an adult son who we think may well be autistic. We are in the process of trying to get a diagnosis. Over the years we have noticed so many things but overlooked it as in the main his behaviours are similar to most of us; and we are all somewhere on the spectrum, right?

Why I say we need help, is because we want him to be able to help himself in certain things and to understand that we believe small tweaks to his habits and behaviours will help him massively. We might be wrong, but we want him to try and see if things improve for him. For example, he will do something in a certain way, which takes a long time. To help explain what I mean, when he was younger he had a paper round. He would start at No 1, then cross the road and do No 2, then cross back, do No 3, cross back and do No 4 etc all the way up to 106. He would be crossing back and forth all the way taking more than twice as long to do the road, than if he just started at No 1, did all the odds and cross once and do all the evens. We explained this and he seemed to agree and understand, but then continued to do it his way. We tried to explain that doing it in this way was taking him nearly 3 times longer to do that same task than someone else. He agreed, or at least seemed to agree. We asked him to just try it our way so he could see for himself the difference and if he still wanted to do it his way, great, but then he should understand that people may think that was inefficient, eg a future employer.

Another example is his parking of his car. So we live in a road where we have some parking bays on one side and none on the other. When he parks he drives in face forward and straight into a parking bay. No issue really with that. The problem is that when our neighbours opposite arrive on the none bay side they just park on the road in front of their houses. This now makes reversing his car out much much harder. I have suggested to him that when he arrives to reverse park into the bay, so that when he wants to drive out and our neighbour’s cars are opposite he can easily manoeuvre his car straight out. He finds reverse parking easy to do and agrees that the driving straight out is also much easier, yet he still parks face forward and then struggles with trying to get his car out when the neighbours have parked up.

I guess what I am asking is that despite his agreeing with us, he still practices the ‘inefficient’ or ‘difficult’ option and there are so so many examples. We need help in maybe explaining it so that he genuinely does understand, as it seems that he is just agreeing and then doing his own thing. It is so so frustrating. It causes arguments and we so so desperately want to help him but equally want him to help himself. It almost feels like he nods, but doesn’t actually get what we are saying, so we need to say it differently, maybe.

Anyways, any help welcome. Sorry to go on...

Parents
    • To a person with Autism things are black or white, theres no inbetween.  An Autistic persons brain is turned up completely different to that of someone who doesn't have Autism. What makes no sense to you, makes perfect sense to them and is logical. Numbers are counted 1 to 100, so he delivers his papers that way. We dont count in 2's from 1-99 and then 2 up to 100, so to your son it makes no sense to deliver papers that way. With alot of things, it's more that we need to change our behaviours to help people with Autism,  not try to change them and their behaviour. Its alot easier to change our behaviour. Plus who gets to decide whose way is correct anyway??? Its always assumed the one with the Disability is wrong....... maybe we are the ones doing things wrong. 
Reply
    • To a person with Autism things are black or white, theres no inbetween.  An Autistic persons brain is turned up completely different to that of someone who doesn't have Autism. What makes no sense to you, makes perfect sense to them and is logical. Numbers are counted 1 to 100, so he delivers his papers that way. We dont count in 2's from 1-99 and then 2 up to 100, so to your son it makes no sense to deliver papers that way. With alot of things, it's more that we need to change our behaviours to help people with Autism,  not try to change them and their behaviour. Its alot easier to change our behaviour. Plus who gets to decide whose way is correct anyway??? Its always assumed the one with the Disability is wrong....... maybe we are the ones doing things wrong. 
Children
  • Thank you. You are right. I am seeing it so much better now that I am speaking with people who are themselves autistic in some way or who have better understanding and experience and I in dealing with the situations as they arise.

    Within a day or so I have learned so much. Thank you.