CircusSquirrel
08-30-2006, 02:58 PM
Hello All,
I have a wonderful 12 year old son with Asperger's. He is functioning very well, he doesn't require any special accomodations at school, and with the help of social skills therapies he is being pretty well accepted by his peers. My question is this: Asperger's kids are known to be quite naive since they tend to take things at face value. My son just started the 7th grade and he knows less about sex and violence and, come to think of it, other "real life" situations than do his peers. For example, he doesn't pick up on the mild sexual slang his peers sometimes use and comes home and asks his dad to translate for him. He also finds it astonishing when he hears about a classmate's parents getting divorced or even reading in the paper of people committing crimes. My husband and I have talked to him about all the age appropriate things: the basic "where babies come from" talks, the dangers of drugs and alcohol, stranger safety, all the normal things. Should we expose him to more "real-life" situations by talking about these things more or let him pick it up at his own speed? We don't let our children watch R-rated movies and we're relatively disciplined, but I don't think we're overbearing. He has been exposed to many people and environments (we're a military family so we move quite a bit--three times in the past 4 years) and I think that has actually helped his social skills (even though Asperger's kids are resistant to change, I think since he was forced to adapt it actually helped). Anyhow, just looking for some input. I don't know whether to let him remain more naive than his classmates or not. For the record, his classmates are all good kids, and the things they talk about that "shock" my son are very mild, I remember talking about the same things at that age. He is doing well right now, so I don't want to rock the boat too much, but I don't want him to feel lost and confused, even if the topics are a bit uncomfortable.
I have a wonderful 12 year old son with Asperger's. He is functioning very well, he doesn't require any special accomodations at school, and with the help of social skills therapies he is being pretty well accepted by his peers. My question is this: Asperger's kids are known to be quite naive since they tend to take things at face value. My son just started the 7th grade and he knows less about sex and violence and, come to think of it, other "real life" situations than do his peers. For example, he doesn't pick up on the mild sexual slang his peers sometimes use and comes home and asks his dad to translate for him. He also finds it astonishing when he hears about a classmate's parents getting divorced or even reading in the paper of people committing crimes. My husband and I have talked to him about all the age appropriate things: the basic "where babies come from" talks, the dangers of drugs and alcohol, stranger safety, all the normal things. Should we expose him to more "real-life" situations by talking about these things more or let him pick it up at his own speed? We don't let our children watch R-rated movies and we're relatively disciplined, but I don't think we're overbearing. He has been exposed to many people and environments (we're a military family so we move quite a bit--three times in the past 4 years) and I think that has actually helped his social skills (even though Asperger's kids are resistant to change, I think since he was forced to adapt it actually helped). Anyhow, just looking for some input. I don't know whether to let him remain more naive than his classmates or not. For the record, his classmates are all good kids, and the things they talk about that "shock" my son are very mild, I remember talking about the same things at that age. He is doing well right now, so I don't want to rock the boat too much, but I don't want him to feel lost and confused, even if the topics are a bit uncomfortable.

