I read an article that out there on the internet that painted aspie parents as distant, unfeeling cold-hearted jerks who neglect their children. It even used a lot of those words. That article stabbed me in the heart because I am so not that way with my kids. But I was raised that way and I wonder if having that childhood has created the knowledge and focus for me to defy any natural tendency that AS might have within me to be distant to my kids.
My mother wasn't an aspie but she's not NT. I think she was an undiagnosed, untreated bipolar. She just had so many symptomatic behaviors of that disorder. If that wasn't it, it was something like it. She even started hoarding. Her treatment of me created a tremendous "NO" list for how I parent my children. Her treatment of my dad created a tremendous "NO" list for how I behave as a wife to my husband, as well.
I don't think I'm an exception just because I had a crummy childhood, though. There are more aspie parents whose kids are their world. They treasure every moment, can't help crying when they come across old school projects from when their kids were much younger, and might even show symptoms of thanatophobia.
I probably bring in a B on motherhood with an A+ for effort. My husband picks up the slack on a lot of stuff because I forget. He'll finish the laundry, finish cooking dinner, finish vacuuming the carpet, finish the shopping. My kids think I spend too much time on the internet... nevermind that I also work on the internet selling prints and then my resale shop on eBay. But if they need my attention, they have it. Dishes can be done later, laundry can be done later, everything can be put on hold* if one of my babies wants to read a book or sing a song.
* Of course, these things aren't really put on hold. My husband has noticed that when I put something on hold, I forget it's on hold and never return to it. So he just picks up where I leave something and gets it done. I assume that this is because he is a good spouse and a good parent, who understands his wife and that the kids are a top priority. He's neuro-typical.
Good parents come with all kinds of diagnoses on their medical records. I have AS, ADD, Depression, Social Anxiety Disorder, Anxiety, PTSD, Insomnia, IBM, and PMDD. Out of my 4 kids, only my 5 year-old will say I'm not a nice mom and that's because I do really mean things like make him take a bath, eat his food, do his homework, and pick up after himself. Don't you feel sorry for him?