As an aspie who does clinical work, I come across a lot of issues that I remember dealing with when I was a child... but I also come across ones I didn't. I rather enjoy those -- they're more of a challenge.
Sometimes the parent needs help figuring out what the issue is in the first place; I'm reasonably good at that. Sometimes I remember how I dealt with them myself and pass that on to the parents of the child. Sometimes I can think of a strategy myself; sometimes I've heard someone mention a few or read something that does so.
Sometimes, however, I need a bit of help.
I recently began working with the NT mother of three children, all of whom are on the spectrum. While the focus of our last conversation was her youngest child, she mentioned an... issue... that her middle child has.
Specifically, he refuses to use the toilet (for defecation, anyway). He understands the toilet's purpose, but refuses to sit on it. Instead, when he needs to "go", he'll half-fill the bathtub with warm water, sit in that, defecate, and manually move the feces into the toilet.
I suspect that it's a sensory issue -- he avoids touching cold things and a toilet seat can be rather cold. Similarly, I suspect that the purpose of the warm water is to offset the bathtub's chill so that he can sit there without touching cold porcelain.
Unfortunately, this isn't exactly the most sanitary method. It's also problematic in other ways, notably including the fact that not every bathroom has a bathtub.
In other words, we need to teach him a new strategy.
Do any of you have this issue? If so, how do you deal with it? If not, do you have any ideas for strategies?