Teenage son with Aspergers

Hi,

i really need some help please.... I have a 14 year old son who has Aspergers and ADHD. I am really struggling with appropriateness and behavior.

He doesn't go out at all, however i have recently found on his phone really in appropriate materials...He has also been talking to complete strangers, I believe posing to be young girls that are sending him images supposedly of themselves (clearly they aren't) and asking for photos in return. My son trusts everyone and can't see bad in anyone and has sent photos to these people (I'm mortified) he cannot see what he has done is wrong and doesn't have the understanding or language to understand the dangers involved. He started talking to girls from school a while ago but in a very abrupt way, talking to 3 or 4 girls at the same time in the same way, he got found out and was the laughing stock but couldn't see why... i removed all internet for a month but when I gave it back he was straight back on it again, having learnt nothing. I spoke to his Aspergers/ADHD consultant who tweeted his meds And said it was obsessive behavior now...

He has now raised the bar even further by sending photos of himself to complete strangers and I have no idea how to make him understand he can't do that and the dangers involved. I feel physically sick.

I have taken all internet access away from him and removed all his devices.

Was thinking I need to find an appropiate awareness course??

please any suggestions???

Thanks in advance.

A very worried mum!

Parents
  • I have quoted Tony Attwood recently, in another thread, and this is from the same paragraph on page 308-9 of The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome (Jessica Kingsley Pub 2006)

    "Sexuality can become a special interest in terms of acquiring information and an interest in sexual diversity and activities. The desire for sexual activities and sexual intimacy can be excessive, even compulsive"

    Trouble is there is not a lot of helpful information around in print. Notwithstanding it is such a widespread issue, everyone seems very coy about it, which isn't helpful to young people on the spectrum.

    OK, he is 14. Early stages of puberty, raging hormones, doesn't understand what's happening to him.

    Except he would normally get reference points from his peers, who are all busy discussing this at the moment, and looking up websites and doing just the same sort of things - except they are able to discuss it, even if it is "the blind leading the blind" as regards accuracy!  And they are able to discretely share these discussions with some willing girls.

    What you have to remember is that your son is unlikely to be able to partake in these discussions (though he may be able to evesdrop). Worse, because he's a bit odd and a bit gauche and impressionable perhaps, they'll take particular pleasure in feeding him wrong informatiion and encouraging him.

    The teasing and bullying, may not just be on account of things he's now saying and doing, but of course has been long established, though you might not be aware of it.

    So he is likely to be very isolated. Teenage years are often the worst for boys with Asperger's (someone else can comment on whether it affects girls the same). You start to get "gang" identities which are very exclusive to someone with aspergers.

    I don't know what the answer is. The fact is there is a lack of literature on it, other than inappropriate behaviours of course, which seems to be a fetish of the psychologists, without providing any helpful answers.

    Nor can I give you much comfort, as if he is troubled now at 14 it could be much worse by 18. He is likely to remain sexually naiive or confused about what is actually a natural part of him, his sex drive.

    What you have to be very careful about is not appearing to punish him for having a sex drive. That really would do a lot of damage long term.  A lot of people on the spectrum get guilt complexes that last a lifetime.

    Perhaps if you can get some practical books on sexuality he can read, that you've checked for suitability, that will fulfill his craving for answers. Otherwise he is very likely to search anywhere he can find this out - and the easiest stuff to find is the porn.

    Another option is to find a mentor in an older boy (or girl - there may be advantages here) whom he'll taklk it over with, and whom you can be sure wont take advantage.

    But what you must not do is go all Victorian and try to shut him off from access, because he's probably desperate to conform on this, and will look for any advice he can get, inevitably from the worst sources.

Reply
  • I have quoted Tony Attwood recently, in another thread, and this is from the same paragraph on page 308-9 of The Complete Guide to Asperger's Syndrome (Jessica Kingsley Pub 2006)

    "Sexuality can become a special interest in terms of acquiring information and an interest in sexual diversity and activities. The desire for sexual activities and sexual intimacy can be excessive, even compulsive"

    Trouble is there is not a lot of helpful information around in print. Notwithstanding it is such a widespread issue, everyone seems very coy about it, which isn't helpful to young people on the spectrum.

    OK, he is 14. Early stages of puberty, raging hormones, doesn't understand what's happening to him.

    Except he would normally get reference points from his peers, who are all busy discussing this at the moment, and looking up websites and doing just the same sort of things - except they are able to discuss it, even if it is "the blind leading the blind" as regards accuracy!  And they are able to discretely share these discussions with some willing girls.

    What you have to remember is that your son is unlikely to be able to partake in these discussions (though he may be able to evesdrop). Worse, because he's a bit odd and a bit gauche and impressionable perhaps, they'll take particular pleasure in feeding him wrong informatiion and encouraging him.

    The teasing and bullying, may not just be on account of things he's now saying and doing, but of course has been long established, though you might not be aware of it.

    So he is likely to be very isolated. Teenage years are often the worst for boys with Asperger's (someone else can comment on whether it affects girls the same). You start to get "gang" identities which are very exclusive to someone with aspergers.

    I don't know what the answer is. The fact is there is a lack of literature on it, other than inappropriate behaviours of course, which seems to be a fetish of the psychologists, without providing any helpful answers.

    Nor can I give you much comfort, as if he is troubled now at 14 it could be much worse by 18. He is likely to remain sexually naiive or confused about what is actually a natural part of him, his sex drive.

    What you have to be very careful about is not appearing to punish him for having a sex drive. That really would do a lot of damage long term.  A lot of people on the spectrum get guilt complexes that last a lifetime.

    Perhaps if you can get some practical books on sexuality he can read, that you've checked for suitability, that will fulfill his craving for answers. Otherwise he is very likely to search anywhere he can find this out - and the easiest stuff to find is the porn.

    Another option is to find a mentor in an older boy (or girl - there may be advantages here) whom he'll taklk it over with, and whom you can be sure wont take advantage.

    But what you must not do is go all Victorian and try to shut him off from access, because he's probably desperate to conform on this, and will look for any advice he can get, inevitably from the worst sources.

Children
No Data