Hi,
My AS daughter, just turning 4 years old last Nov, seems to understand more about what's going on with herself. She probably knew about her special needs from undergoing so many therapies. She's old enough to know that these are therapies, not fun games.
She just graduated from PT. But she still has weak fine motor skills and is getting OT, so that she can write and depends less on adults to take care of her (e.g., feeding, buttoning, etc.) She also receives speech therapy due to her VPI (velopharyngeal insufficiency) and language therapy to help with the use of language in social situations--a typical problem of AS, I guess.
And recently she has said something like "I can't do it." or "it's too hard" (without any attempt to do it). Two days ago, she was so upset about minor things. And I knew she had something else in her mind, so I asked her what's really going on. She sobbed and said "I can't do anything. I'm not smart." These two sentences really choked me up inside because not only it's not true, but also it showed that my attempt that I'd thought was supposed to help her had sent negative feedback on her self-esteem.
Right now, what I am trying to do is to point out her strengths like her advanced reading and math skills, even though I don't know if it's too late to do it. Her self-esteem has already tarnished by her own conclusion that "I need help on most of the things; therefore I'm not smart." It's hurt to see her refuse to try something new just because she doesn't belive that she can do anything.
If you have any advice or tips or reading on how to boost AS child's self-esteem, I'd appreciate it very much.