magz wrote:
AS parent of one diagnosed AS kid and one NT (suspected ADHD).
Parenting is a challenge. Requires
counting your spoons all the time.
I agree with the spoon counting.
Four children here, all eighteen or older now, and I am autistic. One of them lived with her mother full time though, my step daughter. I couldn't love her more if she's was my biological child, but I mention it because she saved the bulk of her rebelling/difficult moments for her biological mother while the others saved that stuff for me
i think it is hard for a lot of people to know what little ones, three and under, are really expressing. Sometimes if you are the main caregiver, you get to pattern spotting with a little one. If, say, they eat everyday around two, you know that 1:45 crabbiness is probably hunger. If they tug on an ear while teething, v/s make a scrunch face when gassy... but a lot of the time, there isn't an overly obvious clue, so you're just guessing. Even after they speak, they don't always have the words to say what is wrong, so you have to ask questions and hope the two of you can get it figured out to give them some comfort or relief. At least that's how it went for me, and according to my ex, I was better at knowing what was up with the kids than they were. But I was the primary caregiver for the other three.