Tortuga wrote:
I do know what you're talking about. My son has some motor skill delays and it's sometimes easier for me to do what needs to be done than waiting for him to make his own snack, etc.. Most of the time though, I'm getting him to work on life skills. He needs to be able to do stuff for himself.
However, I think a lot of parents are doing this with perfectly typical children. They aren't saying 'no' to their kids either. I see tons of little princes and princesses when I'm out and about.
I agree with this completely, for AS/atypical kids and NT kids as well. We don't do our kids any favors when we deprive them of the gifts of self-sufficiency and problem-solving. Of course each kid is different. Of course you don't make a child do things s/he physically or neurologically can't do. But I think it's good to push them a little bit beyond their comfort zone once in awhile, and especially to teach them to do for themselves as much as possible.
My little brother had a mild case of Tourette's, for instance. He did not have grand mal seizures or scream profanities, he just shivered or spaced out once in awhile. But he could still run and jump and play and goof around and get into trouble, just like all "normal" kids his age. Nevertheless, our mother always treated him as her "sick little boy" and fawned over him and catered to his every whim. He grew up whiny, entitled, spoiled, and six foot five - always insisting on having name-brand clothes and shoes and a big shiny truck when he was old enough to drive, even though by then my mother couldn't afford such things - she bought it all for him anyway, and paid his insurance, too.
Our mother often hollered at us to "grow up" and "act like adults." But she did all she could to undermine and keep us dependent on her, to keep us from growing up and learning how to operate in the world. When I enrolled in a high school course for "life skills" that taught how to write a resume, keep a job, balance a checkbook, and budget expenses, my mother became angry with me and insisted I drop the class - she said it was beneath us, and only for low-income kids who were too stupid for college. ?! Funny, I thought everyone needed to learn to budget, get a job, and pay their bills on time.