It's not the lack of interest in video games that makes me wonder about autism. It's the difficulty finding (other) common interests or being able to make conversation about anything other than a special interest. I have two kids, one autistic and one not. Neither is particularly interested in video games. But the difference in their ability to make friends and talk to others is worlds apart. And the OP's description of her son sounds more like my autistic child than my allistic (non-autistic) child. |
[mastodon]
Possibly the nuttiest advice I’ve ever read on dcum |
He is smarter than the other kids. Even at a private school. You may need to look at magnet options (TJ, Blair depending on where you live) to get him with other like-minded kids. Your current pool is too small. He will find his group, and go through life with other bright inquisitive friends who don't have their heads stuck in gaming 24x7. |
What? My son doesn't have a special interest. He has tons of interests, they just don't involve video games. And yes, his teachers confirmed that's all his classmates talk about during lunch and recess. Why is no one suggesting THEY branch out? |
Are you the OP? Your initial post gave the impression that he has narrow interests. If that was wrong, my apologies. In that case, the problem might be a poor fit with his classmates -- that happens, especially in small schools. It's not anyone's fault and no one has to change their interests. You might want to consider changing schools so he fits in better with his peers. There's no reason to pay for a school that's a bad fit. |
He has narrow interests,yes, but many of them. I wouldn't consider them ASD-related, at all - he just stumbles across more adult things and wants to discuss them. |
Why? Learning to navigate social circumstances with his peers. But also learning to explore his passion in a community that explores this. The key to the latter is that when you have a child exploring a forum not specifically designed for children, the parent/guardian needs to monitor the communications with your child. I have middle schoolers who are on forums for topics of interest. I monitor what they submit and what responses they get. But they enjoy learning more about subjects of interest and I proactively monitor their communication in the fora. |
| I was that kid. Not on the spectrum, just different more bookish interests. Videogames are not part of any solution. I found that it got better when I landed in MS. Once there were more kids, I could find my people. |
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As someone with different interests who went to a small private school, my advice is to consider sending him to a larger public school where he will gravitate to more kids like himself. Maybe they won't have the exact same interests, but they will have different interests they can share.
Small private schools can be very cliquish and I learned to shut up and not talk about interests to avoid being bullied. It sounds like he needs a larger environment with larger numbers of advanced kids, so he won't get so bored. |
| Seek help asap |
| My nephew is similar. He played video games sometimes and liked them, but also had very diverse interests. I remember one day when he came home and told his parents something along the lines of — he was so glad they encouraged him to have interests other than video games because the other boys at school exclusively talked about video games and had no idea how to continue a conversation if he tried to discuss another topic (to be clear, he also liked talking about video games but not all the time). It validated their deliberate efforts to encourage him to be well rounded. He accepted that there were some social things that only his school friends could provide and some intellectual things that only his parents/family could provide. He was fine with that. He is now in college and that’s where he found way more like minded people and is very happy). |
NP. Because they’re not the ones who are unhappy and unable to connect with friends? |
| As a parent I’d be looking at the possible violence associated with military battles. If the obsession has to do with weapons, casualties, etc. it might be time to intervene, especially for someone who is only 11 and has been fixated on this topic for years (and threw a fit when the mom tried to mix it up a bit). |
| Maybe Boy Scouts? Group for other kids on the spectrum? |
| No advice on the social skills aspect, but outschool can be a good place to find kid groups related to special interests. |