How old is your son?
Anyway, you can't protect your child from struggles, and enduring struggles can make for good character if guided properly. You cannot abandon your child, because destabilizing him by leaving him will give him exponential emotional problems on top of what he already has. So please nix that idea Right Now.
There are many unhappy AS people, but from what I have seen in the rest of the world, there are a lot of unhappy NT people, or people posing as NT who have all other sorts of addictions and neuroses and mental issues. So, don't think that being AS is some sort of marker for catastrophe moreso than any other group of people.
Nobody ever said parenting was going to be easy. And you are not given more than you can handle. The question is: Do you want to (handle it)?
When I explained to my boss that my son was Dx'd with PDD-NOS, and that was why I had to take off time to go to meetings and therapies, he looked sad for me and said "I'm so sorry". I honestly didn't understand his reaction. I guess I sort of understand it now, because every day is a challenge but I would say, perhaps no more so than another child with bipolar, schizophrenia, multiple sclerosis, ODD, ADHD, depression or who knows what else you can add to the list of challenges. Nobody is guaranteed an easy path. If an easy path, sometimes that is worse because the flip side is growing up without character or depth.
Not to say I don't sympathize, because my two sons are on the spectrum and I am also on the spectrum. Every day is a circus Haha!
But you can't give up. Because that is the worst you can do. You do on-the-job-training like we all do. And you try to make it work to the best of your ability. Because there is nobody out there who will be a better Mommy to your child than You. And that's all there is to it.
Last edited by mikassyna on 07 Mar 2013, 1:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.