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Thank you soooo much for sharing that with us!  I am all choked up now.  It helps me to understand my son a lil more, too.  I don't have problems with my inlaws as I don't have any.  Also, my family lives in MN whereas we live in Calif so we don't see much of anybody at all.  Although they may never understand PDD, when we do see my family and friends, they "make" the time to spend with us as a "whole" not just me.  It sickens me to hear that family members are not accepting them cuz they are  different! 

thanks for posting that. i had never seen it, i just emailed it to all of my family.

kate

It is hard to know how to respond to words like that when they come from the ones we love.  My mom in law, a wonderful person, isn't so wonderful when it comes to dealing w/my daughter and her diagnosis.

Just to share:  2 wks ago when we visited them she asked me "So is Anna still autistic?"

Ok....what?

I stuttered and said...."I don't know".

Anna is still the same Anna she was the last time she saw her. Her speech is making leaps but that isn't the cure all to autism or PDD or what ever it is she has.

The second guessing ourselves as parents is so normal. Even when raising a NT child.

I have been told to try to understand my mom in law and allow such comments to just roll off my back...but if she was living w/me...I think I would flip. (:

Maybe you can write her a letter or print off some of these post for her to read. Maybe it will help her get more comfortable w/it all. If she is like my in laws then that won't work...mine don't want anything to do w/it and they are very uneducated about PDD or autism. I guess it is easier to be in denial if you aren't with them all the time.

mary

My mother in law has been staying with us for the last month, helping with the new baby.  She's been a huge help to me because she takes the baby in the mornings while I sleep, which has saved my sanity like I could never have imagined.  However, she's either afraid of Jake or she just doesn't like him.  She doesn't want to be alone with him, she practically runs away whenever he shows any emotion.  She's been saying things to my husband like if only we had taken him to the park more when he was younger, this could have been prevented.  Or, "you let him watch TV before he was 2, right?" As if it was our bad parenting that caused Jake to be autistic.  And though I know, rationally, that it's the most absurd thing anybody could say, and comes from a place of complete ignorance, part of me "believes" her.  It was my bad parenting that caused this.  If I had been a better mother, Jake would now be "normal." Maybe I should have taken him to the park more when he was younger. (I took him to the park all the time!!)

My parents were here for about a week right when the baby was born, they came down to watch Jake while I was in the hospital.  Now, they only live about an hour away, but they don't spend much time with him and this was the most they had been with him pretty much his whole life.  They were very surprised at how he behaved and kept saying "it's absolutely heartbreaking. Heartbreaking!"

Yeah, it is heartbreaking, and he does act weird, but he's still their grandson.  Shouldn't they still love him unconditionally? Does it matter if he does funny things and says funny things and doesn't act like other 3 year olds act? Don't they still want to hug and kiss him and tell him he's beautiful? 

I really needed to get that out, although I don't feel any better now.  Thanks for listening (reading).

 Hey there!

I'm glad you got that off your chest, now if you could just get it out of your mind! I always say guilt and grief go withthe territory. I hav edays when it ways heavily on my mind but I know deep down in my heart, I didn't do anything and neither did you.  You are his mom and you do what's best for him, as you have done since the day he was born.  You've got the case of  "woulda coulda shoulda" and that's ok, we ALL go thru it from time to time but in the end, we block it out and go on because that's what we need to do. we are entitled to have our moments(days) but then somehow we find the strength to go out and fight for our kids. Unfortunately, my inlaws were alot like the scenarios you described with the exception that I have an older NT daugghter and they wanted to see/ visit/ vacation with her but not my son. I've come to terms with it and stated  that we are a package deal take it or leave it. I haven't spoken to them in months and ya know what?  I could careless. It breaks my heart when the kids ask for them (especially Connor) but it also breaks my heart that society won't accept him for who he is and sadly, his grandparents are included. It's their loss, they won't get to know what a beautiful people they'll become. Stay strong and please feel free to vent more I truelly believe that by bringing issues up like this,we all benefit from the topic.

Eileen

had jake not had the issues he has you would not be the mother YOU ARE. stop looking at it as if you did something wrong and consider just possibly that his duty in life is to make you an exceptional mother. I know it is rough and frantic at times, but maybe this is your schallenge4 in life. chalk it all up to experience of mother hood and how much more understanding you will be than what they are. you cant change any one else, you can only alter the way you percieve things. you said it IGNORANCE. ignorance is not bliss, its ignorant!

kate

So sorry to hear all that. 

Hey if autism came from not taking kids to the park enough or watching TV there more then 1 in 166 kids with autism!!!  I never remember my parents taking me to the park and we were supposed to watch TV to keep quiet, and there wan't any Noggin or Blues CLues then!  And we all survived.

Autism is what it is and we just love our babies and give them all that we can. 

Don't let them get you down!

I'll re-post this, I know people have in the past, and I think it's a beautiful way to speak for our kids...

Ten Things Every Child with Autism Wishes You Knew

1. I am a child with autism. I am not "autistic." My autism is one aspect of my total character. It does not define me as a person. Are you a person with thoughts, feelings and many talents, or are you just fat (overweight), myopic (wear glasses) or klutzy (uncoordinated, not good at sports)?

2. My sensory perceptions are disordered. This means the ordinary sights, sounds, smells, tastes and touches of everyday life that you may not even notice can be downright painful for me. The very environment in which I have to live often seems hostile. I may appear withdrawn or belligerent to you, but I am really just trying to defend myself. A "simple" trip to the grocery store may be hell for me. My hearing may be hyperacute. Dozens of people are talking at once. The loudspeaker booms today's special. Muzak whines from the sound system. Cash registers beep and cough. A coffee grinder is chugging. The meat cutter screeches, babies wail, carts creak, the fluorescent lighting hums. My brain can't filter all the input, and I'm in overload! My sense of smell may be highly sensitive. The fish at the meat counter isn't quite fresh, the guy standing next to us hasn't showered today, the deli is handing out sausage samples, the baby in line ahead of us has a poopy diaper, they're mopping up pickles on Aisle 3 with ammonia. ... I can't sort it all out, I'm too nauseous.

Because I am visually oriented, this may be my first sense to become overstimulated. The fluorescent light is too bright. It makes the room pulsate and hurts my eyes. Sometimes the pulsating light bounces off everything and distorts what I am seeing. The space seems to be constantly changing. There's glare from windows, moving fans on the ceiling, so many bodies in constant motion, too many items for me to be able to focus - and I may compensate with tunnel vision. All this affects my vestibular sense, and now I can't even tell where my body is in space. I may stumble, bump into things, or simply lay down to try and regroup.

3. Please remember to distinguish between won't (I choose not to) and can't (I'm not able to). Receptive and expressive language are both difficult for me. It isn't that I don't listen to instructions. It's that I can't understand you. When you call to me from across the room, this is what I hear: "*&^%$#@, Billy. #$%^*&^%$&*" Instead, come speak directly to me in plain words: "Please put your book in your desk, Billy. It's time to go to lunch." This tells me what you want me to do and what is going to happen next. Now it's much easier for me to comply.

4. I am a concrete thinker. I interpret language literally. It's very confusing for me when you say, "Hold your horses, cowboy!" when what you really mean is "Please stop running." Don't tell me something is a "piece of cake" when there is no dessert in sight and what you really mean is, "This will be easy for you to do." When you say, "It's pouring cats and dogs," I see pets coming out of a pitcher. Please just tell me, "It's raining very hard." Idioms, puns, nuances, double entendres and sarcasm are lost on me.

5. Be patient with my limited vocabulary. It's hard for me to tell you what I need when I don't know the words to describe my feelings. I may be hungry, frustrated, frightened or confused, but right now those words are beyond my ability to express. Be alert for body language, withdrawal, agitation, or other signs that something is wrong.

There's a flip side to this: I may sound like a little professor or a movie star, rattling off words or whole scripts well beyond my developmental age. These are messages I have memorized from the world around me to compensate for my language deficits, because I know I am expected to respond when spoken to. They may come from books, television or the speech of other people. It's called echolalia. I don't necessarily understand the context or the terminology I'm using, I just know it gets me off the hook for coming up with a reply.

6. Because language is so difficult for me, I am very visually oriented. Show me how to do something rather than just telling me. And please be prepared to show me many times. Lots of patient repetition helps me learn.

A visual schedule is extremely helpful as I move through my day. Like your day planner, it relieves me of the stress of having to remember what comes next, makes for smooth transitions between activities, and helps me manage my time and meet your expectations. Here's a great web site for learning more about visual schedules http://www.cesa7.k12.wi.us/newweb/content/rsn/autism.asp

7. Focus and build on what I can do rather than what I can't do. Like any other human, I can't learn in an environment where I'm constantly made to feel that I'm not good enough or that I need fixing. Trying anything new when I am almost sure to be met with criticism, however constructive, becomes something to be avoided. Look for my strengths and you'll find them. There's more than one right way to do most things.

8. Help me with social interactions. It may look like I don't want to play with the other kids on the playground, but sometimes it's just that I simply don't know how to start a conversation or enter a play situation. If you can encourage other children to invite me to join them at kickball or shooting baskets, I may be delighted to be included.

9. Try to identify what triggers my meltdowns. This is termed "the antecedent." Meltdowns, blowups, tantrums or whatever you want to call them are even more horrid for me than they are for you. They occur because one or more of my senses has gone into overload. If you can figure out why my meltdowns occur, they can be prevented.

10. If you are a family member, please love me unconditionally. Banish thoughts such as, "If he would just ..." and "Why can't she ... ?" You didn't fulfill every last expectation your parents had for you, and you wouldn't like being constantly reminded of it. I didn't choose to have autism. Remember that it's happening to me, not you. Without your support, my chances of successful, self-reliant adulthood are slim. With your support and guidance, the possibilities are broader than you might think. I promise you I'm worth it.

It all comes down to three words: Patience. Patience. Patience.

Work to view my autism as a different ability rather than a disability. Look past what you may see as limitations and see the gifts autism has given me. I may not be good at eye contact or conversation, but have you noticed I don't lie, cheat at games, tattle on my classmates, or pass judgment on other people?

You are my foundation. Think through some of those societal rules, and if they don't make sense for me, let them go. Be my advocate, be my friend, and we'll see just how far I can go.

I probably won't be the next Michael Jordan, but with my attention to fine detail and capacity for extraordinary focus, I might be the next Einstein. Or Mozart. Or Van Gogh.

They had autism too.


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