Not gonna lie. Being an autistic parent is very taxing. It starts with the unavoidable sensory onslaught and progresses to social / interpersonal responsibilities involving their friends, friends' parents, teachers, sports groups, extracurriculars, etc. Add this to the fact you need to work full-time to afford raising them and to have a big enough living space.
The drain of working full time being a sports mum (elite travel teams with games and practices every night of the week until 10-11 pm, and nearly every weekend (usually 6 am practice), on top of working ... was really hard. I know not all kids are involved in sports but if that's your child's interest and skill (or special interest), it's exhausting. Not to mention socialising with the other sports parents and arranging car pools or social events.
The kids' social life becomes your own for a while.
Many autistic people don't like making phone calls or having to get involved in things outside their comfort zone. Many of us say we feel like we are still adolescents ourselves. With parenting there's no choice. You have to be the adult, make the phone calls (doctors etc.), and be responsible for every moment of another human's existence. There's no vacation time, no days off for yourself, and no guarantee that your child will share any of your interests.
Most of us don't consider ourselves "defective" but we know our energy levels, our comfort levels (sensory, time alone), and our capacity for executive function. I think it's smart when people decide it's not for them, whether they are autistic or not.
Sorry if that's off topic of the off-topic thread.
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I never give you my number, I only give you my situation.
Beatles