High demands and inability to take "no" as an answer

Hi all.

I wanted to reach out to see if there's anyone else is experiencing something like what I'm about to describe. My son is 13 and about two years ago, he was diagnosed with Aspergers and potentially PDA traits. 

He's smart, he look people to the eye, he's got many friends but of course he's not good at reading social cues or understanding sarcasm.

Anyway, my question is about something that cause trouble and disruption in our lives. He usually have high demands, that he usually directs to his mother (we're separated). It could be clothes, expensive holidays, expensive gadgets, etc. He doesn't seem to be aware of the value of money and that people need to work hard to get it.

In line with this, he also comes up with eccentric plans, all of a sudden. For example buying land and building a house somewhere, hiring a team of architects and workers. A massive house with many rooms, and luxury. Of course all of that is absolutely impossible, but explaining that to him is pretty much impossible.

Every time that we need to say "no" to one of his constant demands (that 99% of the time require tons of money), the situation goes out of control. He will have a massive meltdown of destruction, violence, screaming and, something new, now he sometimes escapes the house and runs into the dark, during the night, on roads with plenty of traffic exposing himself and others to dangerous situations.

As his parents, we've learned how to deal with most of his challenges, but the inability of say "no" to him is, by far, the most difficult one because of course in many occasions that is the only answer possible.

So many times we end up lying to him, saying yes and hoping he will later forget or that we will be able to discuss his demand when he is calmer, but that usually triggers him again.

And is getting worse. For every new demand, if the answer is anything different to "yes", that will immediately trigger him, leading to high anxiety and meltdowns, destruction and even dangerous situation.

Please let me know if someone else is going through something like this, and even better if you have any suggestions on how to handle it.

Thanks in advance

Parents
  • So many times we end up lying to him, saying yes and hoping he will later forget or that we will be able to discuss his demand when he is calmer, but that usually triggers him again.

    Bad idea. I remember when my mother promised to take me to town that day to buy art supplies. I'd saved up my pocket money for them. But as the day dragged on she just found job after job to do around the house and it became clear later was going to turn into tomorrow if I didn't do something about it. So I said if she wouldn't take me I'd walk into the city centre myself and she not taking me seriously told me to go ahead. This was before the days of mobile phones. Several hours later I returned with art supplies to find her on the phone to the police. ... Children don't forget.

    In line with this, he also comes up with eccentric plans, all of a sudden. For example buying land and building a house somewhere, hiring a team of architects and workers. A massive house with many rooms, and luxury. Of course all of that is absolutely impossible, but explaining that to him is pretty much impossible.

    Potentially not imposable to him? Aside from a budget I bet he's worked out a lot of details about how it could feasibly work. When I was young I asked my mother if I could build a laser in our kitchen. It wasn't a pipe dream I'd gotten hold of a laser hobbyists book with detailed plans and instructions. It was a several thousand pounds kind of project, a luxury item for sure but not totally unfeasible, after all the book was aimed at hobbyists. Although in that case it may more have been the fact that the idea of me running around with a laser that could punch holes in thin steal plates filled my mother with a sense of existential dread.

    Or another example, growing up I desperately wanted a proper desktop computer. And of course I'd take computer magazines to my dad and show him these high spec machines going for 2000-4000£ in the end a year or 2 later we bought one a lot cheaper. But it wouldn't have occurred to me at the time to show my dad a budget option because I was a bit of a perfectionist and would immediately gravitate to a high spec.

    To a child who's used to dealing in pennies 100£ might as well be a million pounds. It's just this huge scale beyond personal experience and we hear our parents talking about buying a car for x thousand pounds and we think to ourselves "so this is normal adult amounts of money."

    Have you tried diverting him? Giving him an outlet for his projects? For example whats to stop you downloading some architectural software and asking him to design said dream house? Give him some options to pursue until he figures out for himself how hard what he's asking for actually is.

  • That's a very good suggestion actually. He's got a laptop so I'm going to install a CAD software there an ask him to design his dream house! Thank you!

Reply Children
No Data