Is it me?

Hi all,

By way of introduction, I have a son just about to turn 18 and he was misdiagnosed for many years with what turned out to be Aspergers.  This actual diagnosis literally only happened 18 months ago.  He is a brilliant kid with a wicked sense of humour and clearly has a very high functioning ability.  His biggest issue however being, he point blank refuses to accept anyone else's opinion once he has fixated on what he believes to be the answer/solution.

I am estranged from his mother and after what was a very nasty divorce, I have had to build bridges with my boy.  I was for a while the anti-christ as my ex constantly bad-mouthed me and as much as he hates to admit it, this naturally had an effect on his opinion of me.  Knowing this isn't a divorcees rant forum, my biggest concern is what happened this week.

For his 18th he wants a birthday party at my house and we had been planning it and were very much looking forward to it.  In true Aspergers style, he had planned it to the n'th degree but when I questioned something, he went into a complete meltdown with the end product being he told me he never wants to see me again and we're finished.

There are two elements in play here: 1.  his mother lets him do whatever he wants for a peaceful life which I can fully understand as she has him 24/7 and I don't and 2.  as a parent, I don't believe he should get his own way so I am trying to add balance on this one.  Understandably, he sees this as me building walls to what he wants and the default setting of me being the anti-christ is resumed.

I am heart-broken as not a month ago he told me the second he leaves my house, all he can think about is coming back which made my heart lift.  So the question to you all is this:

Should I just give him what he wants if I want to see him or dig my heels in and teach him that life isn't that simple and sometimes you need to make compromises?

If it is possible, we were arguing by email and he literally comes back with the most complicated counter-arguments (one being him accusing me of trying to phsychologically impose my personality onto him) and as hard as I have tried to write a non-rant style email, he completely ignores what I say.

I explained that although he believes his logic wins any argument, even if he believes this, it doesn't make it the case.  I am at a loss and to be perfectly frank, I genuinely don't know what to do next and my heart is heavy because of this.  The party is now off and I am terrified as it is the 'big one' if he misses out on this plan he will never forgive me.

Any advice/guidance or a general slap round the back of the head would be greatly appreciated.

Parents
  • Im an Aspie and a single parent of an ASD 16 yr old. It sucks! My 16 yr old blames me for everything argues points etc etc You know you cant just give in. Yeah kinda easier short term. You want to be mates....maybe its the way to go....you can smoke pot behind the bikesheds next with him pml....  ;) 

    Seriously, I think you just need to hear it from another parent or Aspie.... If you mess with the rules THAT will screw up any confidence that YOU actually know anything or can guide him. I think you know that, its just shhhhh to be the one being hated. Im banking on it with my 16 though. Kids get their security from boundaries, ASD kids arguably more than the NTs.

    Speaking as an ASD teen (admittedly that grew up a while ago haha) I was horrible, I said foul things, I had outbursts and meltdowns. I thought I hated the adults who stuck to their guns. I love and trust them with my life now, and direct my kids to listen to them.

    Just my opinion.... but you did ask   :)

    Transition and change are hard for all kids, soooo much harder for us on the spectrum. For me personally, I wouldnt trust you if I were in the wrong and you didnt care enough to be straight with me. "you are wrong, I disagree, I can not support what you are doing AND I love you, I am here for you always" It is easy to take disagreement or argument or discipline as rejection..... emphasise the why you are doing it/saying it.

    My 16 has just come through a massive meltdown, pre GCSE to start college. Awful. Would have gone completely off the rails if I hadnt dug my heels in.....and I have had that from HIM!

    Hope it helps...if not, ignore me. Im often wrong. x

Reply
  • Im an Aspie and a single parent of an ASD 16 yr old. It sucks! My 16 yr old blames me for everything argues points etc etc You know you cant just give in. Yeah kinda easier short term. You want to be mates....maybe its the way to go....you can smoke pot behind the bikesheds next with him pml....  ;) 

    Seriously, I think you just need to hear it from another parent or Aspie.... If you mess with the rules THAT will screw up any confidence that YOU actually know anything or can guide him. I think you know that, its just shhhhh to be the one being hated. Im banking on it with my 16 though. Kids get their security from boundaries, ASD kids arguably more than the NTs.

    Speaking as an ASD teen (admittedly that grew up a while ago haha) I was horrible, I said foul things, I had outbursts and meltdowns. I thought I hated the adults who stuck to their guns. I love and trust them with my life now, and direct my kids to listen to them.

    Just my opinion.... but you did ask   :)

    Transition and change are hard for all kids, soooo much harder for us on the spectrum. For me personally, I wouldnt trust you if I were in the wrong and you didnt care enough to be straight with me. "you are wrong, I disagree, I can not support what you are doing AND I love you, I am here for you always" It is easy to take disagreement or argument or discipline as rejection..... emphasise the why you are doing it/saying it.

    My 16 has just come through a massive meltdown, pre GCSE to start college. Awful. Would have gone completely off the rails if I hadnt dug my heels in.....and I have had that from HIM!

    Hope it helps...if not, ignore me. Im often wrong. x

Children
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