If you are not a registered member of our community, please click here to register...

 Home Message Boards Health Guide Join for Free Testimonials About Us
Search
   
  


PDA

View Full Version : Sad and Angry


 

 

 
Liamsmom
06-01-2009, 10:51 AM
I made a terrible mistake, and now my son is paying for it. You see I let his Dad come back it was only suppose to be for a few weeks and that was a 3 yrs ago. So basically I've been sharing my room with my son while his Dad has my son's room. His father has crapped all over a once beautiful room, so now the room is such a catastrophe that we don't invite what few friends he has in because of the embarrassment. My son is now at the point of fury and I don't blame him. I just don't want to have to have the police take his father out of here but it's looking like that's the only way. My son loves his father and I don't want this to traumatize him any more than he already is, but the fighting already is and also is the loss of his room and privacy. Has anyone else gone through something like this with their aspie child? Any advice on how to do this in the least damaging way? I've really painted us both into a corner and can't wait any longer for the paint to dry. My son is already having a hard time in school home is suppose to be the one place where he can relax be himself and feel at ease and he doesn't he's just as stressed here as he is out in the world and I have to do something. My greatest fear is that once his dad is out that'll be it he'll eventually be out of my sons life forever although personally I think it's best but like I said my son loves his dad and his dad loves him he's just screwed up. Being a child of divorce I know how long it takes to heal when your dad leaves and you never see him again.

Jeez maybe this should've been under parenting or relationship but since he is an aspie they're special circumstances. Any advice would be appreciated.

Sponsor
 



roses4lace
06-02-2009, 02:45 AM
Whatever you do will be difficult. Think about which decision is best for you and your son, and for your mental health. Then make that decision. Try not to worry about the future, do what's best right now, because you're living in the "right now". We all learn to deal with losses. As an aspie myself, I can deal much better with loss than with constant anger, chaos and agitation.

Can you talk to your son? If so, acknowledge that you recognize he is furious with his father, and share your own feelings about the situation. Tell your son you may have to do something unpleasant to solve the situation, perhaps police, and you just wanted him to know ahead of time. Even ask him if he has ideas of how to solve the problem. If we are given a "heads up" in advance it gives us time to get used to the idea, so it doesn't scare/affect us as badly when it happens. Bring up the fact he will see his father less, and ask how he thinks he will deal with it. Aspies are generally way too smart, too early, but you can talk about things with them that you can't with most children.

When I got divorced, I discussed it a lot with my son. To let him know it wasn't his fault, kind of talked to him about how our lives would change, and told him he would live with me, but that I realized I forgot to ask him (at age 6) if he had a preference of who he lived with. He thought about it carefully and basically said he would miss both of us very much, but he would miss me most, so he would prefer to live with me. I never did anything to try to turn him against his dad, nor block his dad from coming to get him. He got to see for himself all the broken promises, and how he was never on his father's priority list, and how often his dad lied. Though I didn't think of my husband and me as "fighting", my son said he was glad he wasn't having to watch us fight anymore.

Good luck with these hard decisions, you're in a difficult situation.





Site owned and operated by HealthBoards.com (TM)
Copyright and Terms of Use © 1998-2009 HealthBoards.com (TM) All rights reserved.
Do not copy or redistribute in any form!