Chupa-Thingie wrote:
Thanks for clarifying. I am just trying to decide if my son would be better off at a special program that is very structred and supportful, which is not an AS only program, where they essentially assist the kids through a lighter semester. They live in their own building which is monitored. I won't know if he is ready for it until (MAYBE!! !) next spring.
I appreciate your thoughts and experiences.
Does you son work/drive/socialize near NT levels?
No, he doesn't drive mainly because he has distance/perceptual issues. I think if we moved to a less congested area, he would be able to learn to drive. It's a bad idea learning to drive in horrendous city traffic. My son works at our business right now and is still learning perspective taking for work. He is exceedingly polite, however, which allows him to get along with others. He no longer perseverates on his interests in conversation, he takes turns, makes jokes. His biggest problem in ToM and dysphrxia. His perceptions of emotions are still pretty immature: angry, upset, happy, sad. We still have to point out that the other person is embarrassed, not angry or upset. It's getting there, though.
He's not an emotionally connected aspie and has no desire to do anything simply to please anyone. He learns social behavior cognitively using rules. Right now, we are working on the concept of "exceptions to rules" and the concept of telling white lies to avoid hurting someone else's feelings. For years, he was very literal and unintentionally hurt people's feelings.
Aspies can and do pick up on peer's negative behavior. That is something to keep in mind when choosing a program.
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