Anonymous wrote:^^^ but if he wasn't willing to learn about dc disability, especially b/c he is challenging behaviorally, it would have been hell on earth. And, yes, we would have divorced.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, in fact most of the families I know with SN kids are intact.
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Anonymous wrote:I think marriages that survive are like all marriages that survive, SN or not. Because there is true partnership and a mutual carrying of the load. The parents are able to work more or less like a well-oiled machine. This is not to deny the heavy load that falls on siblings, the problems of isolation, the questionable education available, the constant anxiety about the child's future, the financial woes -- whether the parents are working well as a team or not, these are incredible stressors. But it helps to have a partnership to fall back on.
Anonymous wrote:<<Get to know all aspects of your SN kid and love them all and everything will end up O.K.>>
With all due respect, this is b.s. My DC has wonderful gifts, yes, but they do not compensate for his extreme disabilities. I have no reason to think everything will be ok. I have to consider that we will be caring for him financially and physically into adulthood.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we pulled together and had two more kids. Our eldest with Aspergers Syndrome is doing wonderfully (he has friends and great grades). Our youngest has a speech/language delay, but we're dealing with it and he'll be just fine.
We're more in love than ever. The key is to take it as a challenge, not a deal breaker, and to love each other through it. If you remember why you got together and had kids in the first place -- love -- then a having a child with SN won't feel like the end of the world.
Also, remember that a disability is only one aspect of that child. Every SN kid we've ever met also had amazing gifts. Get to know all aspects of your SN kid and love them all and everything will end up O.K.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It struck me today how much my DS is like my BIL. My DS has Asperger's and is obsessed with birds. My BIL is a biology professor, an ornithologist, and has been obsessed with birds since childhood. He loves the color red, DS loves the color blue. Both BIL and DS can talk and talk and talk even more than myself: OMG....
No, our marriage hasn't been affected. I adore my DH who we realized probably has Asperger's after DS was diagnosed. DH is a wonderful man and my DS's diagnosis helped me understand DH better. DH is quiet unlike DS and BIL. Thank goodness. Also, I realize my side made an obvious contribution to DS's diagnosis. My mother probably had AS.
All in all, I am so happy DS takes after DH and BIL rather than myself. I was a holy terror, exhausting and difficult, when I was a child even w/o a diagnosis or SNs.
If anything, our son's SNs was helpful to our marriage. DH is a great dad to DS which makes me appreciate him more.
That is just awesome. So happy for you. vBut it just "struck you today"? Because that whole bird color thing has come up on this board before. Excuse my cynicism but there's some truth lacking here.