Anonymous wrote:My autistic son (age 10) is super into money. We're upper middle class, but I grew up poorer, and my son sounds super entitled at times. He likes looking up fancy hotel rooms, tells me the cost of first class tickets is "worth it," and has even shown reluctance to eat food I purchase from Costco. We always fly coach, we stay at Marriott-level hotels, etc., but I think a few random certificates dad has redeemed for nicer hotel stays has whetted my kid's appetite.
It's a fixation that's really upsetting me. I can generally tolerate the obsessions, but this one rubs me the wrong way.
I want to respond positively, but I just don't know how to do that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure this an autism thing?
This doesn't sound like it.
An autism thing about money is counting money, not acting snooty about luxury.
My best friend’s son is autistic and his obsession is travel. Airports, planes, trains, hotels, etc.
My non-autistic cousin is a wanna be influencer and she is obsessed with rewards points and credit cards and luxury vacations.
Weirdly my conversations with each of them have significant overlaps.
Anonymous wrote:Are you sure this an autism thing?
This doesn't sound like it.
An autism thing about money is counting money, not acting snooty about luxury.
Anonymous wrote:My autistic son (age 10) is super into money. We're upper middle class, but I grew up poorer, and my son sounds super entitled at times. He likes looking up fancy hotel rooms, tells me the cost of first class tickets is "worth it," and has even shown reluctance to eat food I purchase from Costco. We always fly coach, we stay at Marriott-level hotels, etc., but I think a few random certificates dad has redeemed for nicer hotel stays has whetted my kid's appetite.
It's a fixation that's really upsetting me. I can generally tolerate the obsessions, but this one rubs me the wrong way.
I want to respond positively, but I just don't know how to do that.
Anonymous wrote:This is a situation where it’s appropriate to break it down exactly why it’s rude to fixate on money. He does not know. It’s uncomfortable and you’re the only person who can spell it out for your son. Being clear is kind.
Anonymous wrote:My autistic son (age 10) is super into money. We're upper middle class, but I grew up poorer, and my son sounds super entitled at times. He likes looking up fancy hotel rooms, tells me the cost of first class tickets is "worth it," and has even shown reluctance to eat food I purchase from Costco. We always fly coach, we stay at Marriott-level hotels, etc., but I think a few random certificates dad has redeemed for nicer hotel stays has whetted my kid's appetite.
It's a fixation that's really upsetting me. I can generally tolerate the obsessions, but this one rubs me the wrong way.
I want to respond positively, but I just don't know how to do that.