Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OK here. He did have a psych ed test to get accommodation at college for adhd. He didn't need them in high school. Testing was 3 hours plus parental meetings.it might have been shorter because he was known to the psychologist.
Was this the psychologist who said he has HFA?
Anonymous wrote:OK here. He did have a psych ed test to get accommodation at college for adhd. He didn't need them in high school. Testing was 3 hours plus parental meetings.it might have been shorter because he was known to the psychologist.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How would you feel if your parents withheld information about you because how they think you would respond? Who knows if he will just give up OR take it as the need to keep doing what he is and accept himself? Susan Boyle found out when she was 40 or so and it made a huge difference to her.
I think you should tell him and help him with his feelings. Who knows he may surprise you but, you are not giving him a chance.
There are no second chances.
Anonymous wrote:Our kid knows he has a diagnosis and it has been helpful in understanding why some things are harder for him while others are easier. Most importantly, I think it's important that your child understands that he has certain traits which may have a genetic basis as he or she eventually selects a romantic partner with whom he might reproduce. In short, my son has expressed that he would feel guilty if his kids had a more severe type of autism, as they might if he married a fellow Aspie who he met in a science or math class and the genes combined. At the moment it's a bit of a joke that he is drawn to the fellow musician, etc. but that he will probably ultimately marry someone who has strengths that compensate for his deficits rather than combining them. That's the hard brutal truth, unfortunately. Too much risk with assortative mating (see baron-cohen on the subject).
Anonymous wrote:How would you feel if your parents withheld information about you because how they think you would respond? Who knows if he will just give up OR take it as the need to keep doing what he is and accept himself? Susan Boyle found out when she was 40 or so and it made a huge difference to her.
I think you should tell him and help him with his feelings. Who knows he may surprise you but, you are not giving him a chance.