Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have tips on teaching driving to people with this profile? Online simulations to make them more comfortable before starting in the car?
There’s a hospital program near me that is for teaching driving to people with TBIs, and I wondered if there is anything specialized like that.
My ASD/ADHD kid learned to drive at 17, during the pandemic, since there was nothing else to do. My husband took one for the team; I couldn't do it. They spent an incredible amount of time in an empty medical parking lot near our house, and then graduated to empty streets on Sunday mornings, and then busier streets and the highway. He passed his driving test easily, because we had gone to the MVA where we wanted him to take the test, and I had taken *video of the course with other students on it* (before being waved off).
Learning was fraught: there was some yelling involved, tearing out of hair and gnashing of teeth. If he hadn't been in virtual school that year, we wouldn't have done it. The problems centered around his inattention, low processing speed and *spatial awareness issues*! I don't know if this is typical of autistic kids, or just issues with my kid. We didn't let him drive alone until he had a part-time job at 20, and even then, he didn't have far to drive.
I keep hoping self-driving cars will become safer...![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and missing social cues. She has an overabundance of empathy towards oppressed/traumatized people, which has put her in a lot of bad situations. She's let many people live with her (not romantically) who rob her and trash her home, gotten her evicted. She's gotten involved in their niche causes even when they don't affect her and arrested at protests. She's alienated herself from friends and family because they don't understand the trauma that these oppressed people have (family is already very liberal and accepting). She's being used and often can't see it. This happens over and over and over again, not one time.
This sounds very, very similar to one of my loved ones with ASD. If you can tell me more about how you have addressed this, I’d appreciate it. What do you think the connection to ASD is? I never put two and two together with this but this is eerily familiar.
Anonymous wrote:Anxiety and missing social cues. She has an overabundance of empathy towards oppressed/traumatized people, which has put her in a lot of bad situations. She's let many people live with her (not romantically) who rob her and trash her home, gotten her evicted. She's gotten involved in their niche causes even when they don't affect her and arrested at protests. She's alienated herself from friends and family because they don't understand the trauma that these oppressed people have (family is already very liberal and accepting). She's being used and often can't see it. This happens over and over and over again, not one time.
Anonymous wrote:18 year old ASD kid. They are preparing to go away to college. Most likely they will go to a school a plane ride or long drive away. They do not have a drivers license but we plan on working on that this spring or summer.
I know they will always struggle socially, but I am hoping for the best.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No college, no job, no driver's license, living at home.
Most of the ASD young adults I know are in the same situation.
I wonder how this will change now that the ASD spectrum has been broadened so much. No snark intended, but there are obviously a lot of kids with ASD diagnoses these days who will be fully independent adults. (no dog in fight).
I know someone with autism who got married. But the outcome was terrible, he just walked away from his family. I think he lost his job as well.
True autism has a huge impact on functioning.
Anonymous wrote:Can anyone suggest any resources - books, websites, etc., that cover basic life skills? I've looked around but haven't found a good "here's how the world works" for autistic people. They are either too basic - he's extremely intelligent overall - or just cover social skills.
My child is almost done with HS and doesn't have significant difficulties, but we frequently have to explain what comes to most kids instinctively, both practically (basic kitchen skills) and socially (yes, that one sentence email response to a teacher is fine, but you might want to add "Thank you!" at the end).
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone have tips on teaching driving to people with this profile? Online simulations to make them more comfortable before starting in the car?
There’s a hospital program near me that is for teaching driving to people with TBIs, and I wondered if there is anything specialized like that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Seizures, unfortunately. Between that and poor spatial reasoning, I'm not sure a driver's license will ever be a real option.
Thank you for sharing. Driving has been a milestone our 19 year old with ASD hasn't reached yet as well.