Dear diary ...

While others are struggling with isolation and desperate to get back to their normal routines – school, work, friends, hobbies – for me and my daughter there is some respite from the daily stresses of life. You see, my daughter is on the autism spectrum. Yes, we are scared, too. With type 1 diabetes, my daughter is vulnerable to Covid-19 and we have isolated ourselves to try and protect her from this devastating disease. And yet … what is her fear during this pandemic? It may be months before she returns, but it is school life that has her devastated and frightened.

The primary school staff have tried to help. They reassure me that things are not as bad as my daughter perceives them. But I don’t believe them, or at least their limited opportunity to witness everything that happens in the school day leaves me unconvinced. I’ve seen the little knocks to self confidence that she receives regularly. Very subtle, but there, nonetheless. The turn of the head in disinterest when she tries to talk to another child. The bumping her out of the way in the morning line up as they try to get close to their friends because they know she’ll never say anything. The turning of their back on her. The deep hurt and beating up she gives herself because she doesn’t get picked at gym. The giggles and whispering she feels in the classroom. She says she is nothing but a shadow. She tells me nobody likes her, worse: they wouldn’t care if she died in front of them. That is how she feels.

What does a parent do when they see their child crying and hating themselves most days? What is the answer? Years have been spent trying to make school manageable for her but the one thing I cannot do as a parent is change how other children behave towards her. This is my heartbreak and frustration. So you see, this time away from school life is respite indeed. My fear, however, is how she copes when she has to go back after having spent months away. For the first time I am seriously considering home schooling. But here is the conundrum; do I remove her from school and risk her feeling more isolated or let the emotional damage continue? Educational damage or emotional damage; not much of a choice.

What I guess I really want to happen is kindness. We are all different and yet we are all the same – we are all just trying to survive and feel loved, valuable. When this battle against a virus that does not discriminate is nearing its end, will we be less discriminating towards each other? That is the never ending fight, and we must never give up.

Parents
  • Hi, I have lived through parenting a sweet child like yours and my wonderful son is now 17. You are in a very hard stage and I am afraid that your grief will often be present. We are the front lines and never doubt your intuition about the suffering your child is under. I also feel sad reading your post. I would guess your little girl has amazing sensitivity and is good to others when given the chance. The teachers are trying but do fall short unless they too are a parent for a special needs child.  The way my husband and I survived was messy and who knows how well we did.  We just prioritized his sense of being wanted and valued for how unique he was in the world. We never corrected his speech pattern, we pursued his quirky interests and played alot, smiled when he walked in the room.  Also, when he had an angry tantrum he always ended up in a fitful crying ranting release. Behind his anger was always sadness but we were pulled in by the anger.  I stuck by his ranting and listened to his feelings and repeated what I heard him say over and over this happened.  I was VALIDATING him as a person at every chance.  This is very powerful! Also it is under your control.

    A friend of mine had an autistic child in the same class as my son. My son was not diagnosed until he was 14, by the way.  Her son was often oblivious to how his peers shunned him and had parties where he was uninvited.  This changed much later, but later he also had the ability to learn and act on social learning and his mom was amazing with teenage life lessons.  At 8 years old, your daughter is ultra aware of her peer's behavior which in one way is kinda worse than being oblivious (like my son). More reason for you to be solid and consistent with your love and acceptance.  I must say, I think the classmates are the ones who need adjusting and social skills lessons, not OUR KIDS.  One resource I will encourage is 'social stories' by Carol Grey.  Another is www.socialthinking.com  where their website is chock full of helpful things.  I am also an occupational therapist and these resources are very effective. 

    Remember the power of having one close friend or two.  These times are so tough and the homeschool choice is forced on you right now.  See if it is a good fit.  Maybe other homeschooled kids and families are also a better social scene for your child.  Try to live day to day and come back to this forum and vent all you want.  You sound like a very amazing parent who cares deeply and that is the best parent your daughter can have right now.

Reply
  • Hi, I have lived through parenting a sweet child like yours and my wonderful son is now 17. You are in a very hard stage and I am afraid that your grief will often be present. We are the front lines and never doubt your intuition about the suffering your child is under. I also feel sad reading your post. I would guess your little girl has amazing sensitivity and is good to others when given the chance. The teachers are trying but do fall short unless they too are a parent for a special needs child.  The way my husband and I survived was messy and who knows how well we did.  We just prioritized his sense of being wanted and valued for how unique he was in the world. We never corrected his speech pattern, we pursued his quirky interests and played alot, smiled when he walked in the room.  Also, when he had an angry tantrum he always ended up in a fitful crying ranting release. Behind his anger was always sadness but we were pulled in by the anger.  I stuck by his ranting and listened to his feelings and repeated what I heard him say over and over this happened.  I was VALIDATING him as a person at every chance.  This is very powerful! Also it is under your control.

    A friend of mine had an autistic child in the same class as my son. My son was not diagnosed until he was 14, by the way.  Her son was often oblivious to how his peers shunned him and had parties where he was uninvited.  This changed much later, but later he also had the ability to learn and act on social learning and his mom was amazing with teenage life lessons.  At 8 years old, your daughter is ultra aware of her peer's behavior which in one way is kinda worse than being oblivious (like my son). More reason for you to be solid and consistent with your love and acceptance.  I must say, I think the classmates are the ones who need adjusting and social skills lessons, not OUR KIDS.  One resource I will encourage is 'social stories' by Carol Grey.  Another is www.socialthinking.com  where their website is chock full of helpful things.  I am also an occupational therapist and these resources are very effective. 

    Remember the power of having one close friend or two.  These times are so tough and the homeschool choice is forced on you right now.  See if it is a good fit.  Maybe other homeschooled kids and families are also a better social scene for your child.  Try to live day to day and come back to this forum and vent all you want.  You sound like a very amazing parent who cares deeply and that is the best parent your daughter can have right now.

Children
  • Thanks for your reply :-) Yes, she is very good to others when given the chance and she is incredibly sensitive. Thanks for the resources - I'll have a look at them. I have managed to get help through a local charity who are going to match us with other families in our situation which will be great as I find others quite often don't really understand. Thanks for your support x