Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it helps to go through your expectations ahead and tell her exactly what she will do: greet the guests, eat with the family. Then go watch a movie upstairs.
My son is older but he does a ton of chores when we have people over (replenishing crackers, clearing the table, loading the dishwasher). It gives him a concrete task which we appreciate and it makes him happier than socializing. I don’t expect him to spend the whole time with the guests either—he cannot sit and chill with other people, it’s not possible for him.
My experience is that hanging out with other families with ND kids was pretty stressful for all of us and way too chaotic—more fun just to get together with the moms.
All of this.
A house of ND kids is not relaxed, replenishing socializing ime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a sign of a larger issue. You are allowing your special need kiddo to hold your family hostage. For years we let our ASD kiddo do the same. We started to break the cycle in middle school and wish I had done it sooner. The truth is she will never live independently if you allow this to continue. You are going to implement some behavioral guidelines and boundaries for her. The sooner the better. I know this sound hard and harsh but its critical for all of you. You CAN do it. Find a behaviorist who can help you. She needs to understand that in life she is not the center of the universe and if she acts like this in the real world she will never have a job, live independently etc. It won't be easy and you will have to endure tantrums etc as you transition from being controlled by her to forcing her to aceept the rules/boundaries but its so important for you and for her.
What’s a kiddo?
Not to threadjack, but this response made me laugh out loud. I agree--the term "kiddo" is so disrespectful and infantalizing--it really sets off a red flag for me about practitioners who use this term in reference to my child.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest, my only "issue" would be with her interrupting conversation and demanding explanations. But I know kids who are like that and while it's annoying it only really bothers me if the parents consistently indulge the child instead of at least trying to shit it down.
Otherwise, can you explain more about why it's a problem that she won't play board games or video games?
She demands our attention much of the time but won’t take part in typical group activities.
I guess what I'm getting at is why do you need her to take part in group activities?
Or are you looking for advice on how to teach her that she can't demand your attention if she doesn't want to participate?
We’ve tried that. We’re working on that. I am unsure anyone would want to come over to our house and be with us as we work on that.
How old is your child?
I have an ASD child, and I don't have people over all the time as I'm an introvert, but I never hesitate to invite who I want to over. She loves having people over and it's my house. Yes, she also constantly interrupts and she is hyper, but your friends that love you, won't mind the behaviors of your child, unless they are extreme.
Op here. Child is 11. Only recently diagnosed. But things have been hard for a long time. She does not have an intellectual disability. She’s actually very bright. It’s part of the challenge and why she thinks she always should be part of adult conversations. PDA profile resonates a lot.
Anonymous wrote:I think it helps to go through your expectations ahead and tell her exactly what she will do: greet the guests, eat with the family. Then go watch a movie upstairs.
My son is older but he does a ton of chores when we have people over (replenishing crackers, clearing the table, loading the dishwasher). It gives him a concrete task which we appreciate and it makes him happier than socializing. I don’t expect him to spend the whole time with the guests either—he cannot sit and chill with other people, it’s not possible for him.
My experience is that hanging out with other families with ND kids was pretty stressful for all of us and way too chaotic—more fun just to get together with the moms.
Anonymous wrote:How old is she? Could you have a teen/college”sitter” or family member essentially take her somewhere for 3 hours while you have people over? Could she handle you telling her you are having a “grown up game night/movie night/etc” so you made other plans for her? Does she ever spend the night with a grandparent or anyone else?
We entertain regularly, but our daughter has profound ID and autism. She is super low functioning so she has a sitter during these times. I realize our situation is quite different, but just thought I would throw this idea out there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a guest, my only "issue" would be with her interrupting conversation and demanding explanations. But I know kids who are like that and while it's annoying it only really bothers me if the parents consistently indulge the child instead of at least trying to shit it down.
Otherwise, can you explain more about why it's a problem that she won't play board games or video games?
She demands our attention much of the time but won’t take part in typical group activities.
I guess what I'm getting at is why do you need her to take part in group activities?
Or are you looking for advice on how to teach her that she can't demand your attention if she doesn't want to participate?
We’ve tried that. We’re working on that. I am unsure anyone would want to come over to our house and be with us as we work on that.
How old is your child?
I have an ASD child, and I don't have people over all the time as I'm an introvert, but I never hesitate to invite who I want to over. She loves having people over and it's my house. Yes, she also constantly interrupts and she is hyper, but your friends that love you, won't mind the behaviors of your child, unless they are extreme.
Op here. Child is 11. Only recently diagnosed. But things have been hard for a long time. She does not have an intellectual disability. She’s actually very bright. It’s part of the challenge and why she thinks she always should be part of adult conversations. PDA profile resonates a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is a sign of a larger issue. You are allowing your special need kiddo to hold your family hostage. For years we let our ASD kiddo do the same. We started to break the cycle in middle school and wish I had done it sooner. The truth is she will never live independently if you allow this to continue. You are going to implement some behavioral guidelines and boundaries for her. The sooner the better. I know this sound hard and harsh but its critical for all of you. You CAN do it. Find a behaviorist who can help you. She needs to understand that in life she is not the center of the universe and if she acts like this in the real world she will never have a job, live independently etc. It won't be easy and you will have to endure tantrums etc as you transition from being controlled by her to forcing her to aceept the rules/boundaries but its so important for you and for her.
What’s a kiddo?