Anonymous wrote:OP here again. He got fired. They told him it wasn’t a good fit and that they like him very much as a person but that he created confusion among guests because he sometimes didn’t know where to direct them or how to answer their questions and that he should have caught on after a day or two. He is devastated. I think it’s useful information.
Anonymous wrote:My ASD 23 year old college graduate would never be able to do that job. Too fluid and too many people with different needs (and he is good with people and very social). He got a job working for Amazon Logistics and although the beginning was stressful and he needed some support to learn all the rules (and I think everyone does), it is now perfect for him as it is extremely data driven and he knows exactly what to expect at all times and he is a hard worker. And he loves it. Just some perspective here as I was worried about his job prospects earlier but am a lot less worried now.
Anonymous wrote:My ASD 23 year old college graduate would never be able to do that job. Too fluid and too many people with different needs (and he is good with people and very social). He got a job working for Amazon Logistics and although the beginning was stressful and he needed some support to learn all the rules (and I think everyone does), it is now perfect for him as it is extremely data driven and he knows exactly what to expect at all times and he is a hard worker. And he loves it. Just some perspective here as I was worried about his job prospects earlier but am a lot less worried now.
Anonymous wrote:My autistic DD is working her first summer job right now. It's a job that fits her strengths, but we did discuss the possibility that she may be fired. Not every job fits every person. But getting out there and getting experience is good, even if it ends in firing, he'll still have learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy catasrophizing Batman. If he loses this job, that doesn’t mean he will never be employed. I’m sure it taps into all your old fears from when he was little, and that’s hard. But please realize that your anxiety is making you spiral here and that’s not reality.
You clearly haven’t read the whole thread. He WAS fired.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Holy catasrophizing Batman. If he loses this job, that doesn’t mean he will never be employed. I’m sure it taps into all your old fears from when he was little, and that’s hard. But please realize that your anxiety is making you spiral here and that’s not reality.
You clearly haven’t read the whole thread. He WAS fired.
Anonymous wrote:My ASD 23 year old college graduate would never be able to do that job. Too fluid and too many people with different needs (and he is good with people and very social). He got a job working for Amazon Logistics and although the beginning was stressful and he needed some support to learn all the rules (and I think everyone does), it is now perfect for him as it is extremely data driven and he knows exactly what to expect at all times and he is a hard worker. And he loves it. Just some perspective here as I was worried about his job prospects earlier but am a lot less worried now.
Anonymous wrote:Holy catasrophizing Batman. If he loses this job, that doesn’t mean he will never be employed. I’m sure it taps into all your old fears from when he was little, and that’s hard. But please realize that your anxiety is making you spiral here and that’s not reality.
Anonymous wrote:Different people are good at different jobs.