ozzzywoman wrote:
My 10 yr old son was diagnosed with HFA in March this year. We have informed his school and they are doing everything they can for him which is great, but I haven't actually told him about his condition yet. I just don't know how to put it to him in a way that he can understand without feeling "labelled".
Any suggestions?
The following is largely based on guess work, so you will have to be careful to make up your own mind whether there is anything useful in it.
Your son probably knows that he is different. You could make it part of your explanation of what the diagnosis means that he is not alone, there are others like him. And like him, they find some things more difficult than other people, other things come more easily. You could show him a short interview with Vernon Smith on youtube, as an example of someone quite successful (unless you think that would put your son under pressure to win a Nobel prize, too):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g6laOv94VUU
The lead in to the interview mentions Asperger's syndrome. I think for your purposes it's fair if you tell your son it's pretty much the same thing. The drawback is that he might want to know exactly what the difference is, but if you say Asperger's and HFA are two different names for the same thing, someone else might tell him otherwise. I don't know how to handle that.
An idea you could use either as an alternative or in addition is to say that it is in some ways like being left handed, which makes many things more difficult simply because the world is arranged for the right handed majority, but that being left handed can have advantages, for example in tennis or martial arts. His HFA is about how he uses his mind rather than his hands.
I expect that sooner or later others beyond the teachers at his school will know about the diagnosis, and eventually the news will spread to other kids. It is likely that among them will be at least one idiot who will equate autism with retardation and say so. At that point, it should help if your son has experience with people who see autism more as a difference than as a disability or a stigma.
Gromit