When your child get an autism diagnosis: Here are 13 next steps for parents that I WISH someone had told me at the time! A thread, drawn from the @thinkingautism archives, and in observation of #AutismAcceptanceMonth

thinkingautismguide.com/2017/03/after-…

#neurodiversity

1/
After my son’s autism diagnosis, I wished it hadn't taken me so damn long to figure out the best ways to support, help, advocate for, and express my love for my now-adult son—who has always deserved better than a reeling, terrified, depressed, confused, and regretful mom. 2/
I should have given myself more time to recognize my wonderful autistic boy for who he is, rather than what ignorant, misguided people insisted autism made him. I also wish I'd been able to recognize and dismiss all that debilitating ignorance, fear, and confusion. 3/
Ideally, I'd go back in time and advise (& pinch) my former self. But since that's not currently possible, my next best option is to share some hard-earned wisdom with parents who are just starting out, so they can avoid some of my mistakes, & do right by their autistic kids. 4/
1. Give yourself time to adjust.

What most parents of newly diagnosed kids don't realize is that they'll be parenting the same kid they were parenting before the autism diagnosis arrived, & that diagnosis just helps steer you & your parenting approach in the right direction. 5/
There's no denying that autism can bring challenges for your kid or your family, no matter your child's personality or specific needs. But please know that most problems you encounter will be due to lack of understanding and accommodation, and not because of autism itself. 6/
2. Give the people around you time to adjust.

Like me, my friends and family didn't know a thing about autism when my son was first diagnosed. They also didn't know what to say to us, beyond platitudes. I don't really blame them; we were all in that ignorance boat together. 7/
But I do wish I'd been together enough to feed them lines like, "it's okay to ask us questions, but we might not know the answers yet," and "feel free to keep inviting us over; we'll say no if it doesn't work.” 8/
3. Give yourself time to process information critically.

There is so much bad autism information out there. But there's so much good info too! The more informed you become, the more your perspectives on & understanding of autism & parenting will change—ideally for the better. 9/
4. Give yourself time learn which organizations and people to trust.

My biggest shift in understanding happened when I encountered autistic people & their writings, & learned to trust them. And I am forever grateful to orgs like @autselfadvocacy
& @awnnetwork_ for guidance. 10/
While evaluating whether an autism org or person is reliable, you may need to work on your own defensiveness. If you get angry at a person's autism information or an autism org's position… 11/
…consider that you may actually be overwhelmed by the possibility that you had been getting your autism information from unreliable sources. Give yourself the space to walk away and think things over.

More guidelines for evaluating autism orgs:

thinkingautismguide.com/p/position.html

12/
5. Give yourself time to figure out what autism means for your child.

Autistic brains & thinking can be very different from non-autistic brains. If you're not autistic yourself, learning to recognize and understand these differences may take time, as well as trial and error. 13/
What a non-autistic person might think is emotional manipulation/callousness may be logic, EF challenges, or genuine confusion; a child may laugh when other people are in trouble, not to be callous, but out of relief that they or their loved ones aren't the distressed party. 14/
Become educated about autistic learning styles. Not all autistic kids are math prodigies. In fact, studies show that most don't have superior math skills, but rather average or below-average math skills.

#neurodiversity 15/
In addition, co-occuring learning disabilities like ADHD, dyslexia, or dyscalculia are quite common for autistic kids, and can be overlooked—or termed "laziness" if your child is perceived to have academic strengths in other areas, or if your child is a person of color. 16/
6. Give yourself time to figure out what communication looks like for your child.

Everyone communicates. Even kids who don't speak. 17/
But autistic kids who can speak fluidly may not be able to communicate all their intentions. Be very careful about this, as those seemingly fluid talkers often have their communication needs underestimated, and suffer as a result. 18/
For autistic kids like my son, who don't speak or are not fluid speakers: We need to be careful to presume competence, to treat them as though they can understand everything you say. And especially, as @JustStimming writes, to treat them as *people*:

juststimming.wordpress.com/2014/12/21/dan… 19/
7. Give yourself time to figure out which supports, schools, therapies, & environments will help your child succeed.

Is an inclusive educational environment possible? Are you unknowingly subjecting your child to therapies that would never be allowed with non-disabled kids? 20/
8. Give yourself the space to be flexible about needs, and pick your battles.

You may need to adjust your rhythms to those of a kid who doesn't sleep much, whose limited diet means bringing their food along whenever you don't eat at home…

21/
…who thrives on medications you'd previously consider scary choices, who suddenly can't tolerate certain environments & needs to leave.

Remind yourself that your child isn't doing any of those things by choice, & renew your commitment to understanding their autistic needs. 22/
9. Give yourself time to find autistic role models for your child.

As much as you love your child and accept your child—if you're not autistic, then you're not part of the community your child DOES belong to. So please help your child find their people. 23/
10. Give yourself time to think about shared traits.

Even if you yourself don't have enough traits for an autism diagnosis, many parents and siblings get diagnosed with autism themselves after another family member's diagnosis makes them more aware of what autism can mean. 24/
11. Give your child space to grow and change.

Not just when puberty hits (as it can really scramble communication abilities, emotional stability, and coping capabilities), but in terms of autistic development being different than non-autistic development. 25/
I worry a lot about autistic people whose families stop trying to teaching their kids skills because they're past some imaginary development window, when autistic people actually tend to continue to gain skills throughout their lifetimes, more so than non-autistic people. 26/
12. Give yourself time to figure out what your autistic child really enjoys.

Surrender to that joy whenever possible. Don't let people frame your kid's enthusiasms in pathological terms. If your kid likes something, and they're not hurting anyone, let them like liking it. 27/
13. Give yourself time to plan for your autistic child's future without you.

For kids who do not have certain health conditions, there's no reason to think your child won't outlive you. And that's how you need to plan for their future—as one without you in it. 28/
I realize this is a lot of information to digest! Give yourself time to think it all over. If I just made you feel like you stepped into autism parenting information quicksand, come back later, or try to portion it out & think over various bits of advice as needed.

xoxox

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More from @shannonrosa

3 Apr
Now reading Nobody’s Normal: How Culture Created the Stigma of Mental Illness. It’s a new book by @roygrinker, who also wrote the autism assumptions-challenging Unstrange Minds. Will try to thread my ongoing commentary.

#NobodysNormal
Although Grinker is not himself a psychiatrist, he comes from a line of such professionals, and also studies mental illness from an anthropologist’s perspective.
“Although 60 percent of people with a mental illness in the United States still receive no mental health treatment, mental illness is fast becoming a more accepted and visible part of the human condition.” @roygrinker, in #NobodysNormal
Read 11 tweets
2 Apr
I didn't write a new #AutismAcceptanceDay post because pandemic, so please harken to this @washingtonpost chestnut on my long but fruitful autism & parenting journey—How listening to autistic adults helped me understand & support my son:
washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2019… #neurodiversity 1/
Having a disabled child is not particularly rare. Yet our society rarely addresses disability as a real parenting possibility, which means non-disabled parents like me are usually in the dark about best practices for raising a child with a disability. 2/
This state of ignorance is unfair to everyone involved and has made countless kids and parents miserable.

It really doesn’t have to be this way, though. 3/
Read 34 tweets
25 Oct 20
Let’s talk about Why No Autistic Child Should Be in ABA Therapy. I am coming at this from the perspective of a parent whose autistic son is an older teen. Regrets, I have a few. And so we need a thread!

Also, you won’t need to unroll, article is here: thinkingautismguide.com/2020/10/why-no…
1/
Professionals usually tell parents of newly diagnosed autistic children that it is "critical" to put those children in early intervention therapies like Applied Behavioral Analysis (ABA). Parents are warned about "missing a developmental window…” 2/
…then urged to place young autistic children in intensive therapy for up to 40 hours per week. We are told that these therapies are justified by decades of research, and that they will save our autistic children by making them "indistinguishable from their peers.” 3/
Read 48 tweets
15 Oct 20
I think it should be OK to write about our autistic kids. I do. Because parents who aren't autistic themselves—or who are new to autism—need parent role models who do their best to understand & love their autistic kids, and be the parents those kids need them to be.

A thread! 1/
Parent role models are needed because media & social attitudes about autism/autistic ppl are consistently awful. Parents who have only every hear awful things about autism need guidance for accepting who their kids are, so they can avoid blaming their kids for who they aren't. 2/
Parents of autistic kids also need to learn to give mainstream social expectations a flying middle finger.

All parents, whether their children share their genes or not, obsess about how alike and how different their children are from them. Some of us want to write about that. 3/
Read 29 tweets
2 Oct 20
Sadly, most writing from parents about autistic kids is not only awful, but self-defeating: If you publicly write smack about your kids, then it is hypocritical to complain when other people treat those kids badly.

So what does GOOD writing about autism & parenting look like? 1/
Also, how can we parents recognize harmful writing about autistic children, and avoid those negativity pitfalls?

Following are four too-common examples of such bad "autism parent" writing, why using these approaches is not useful, and what you can do instead. 2/
Bad autism parent writing trope #1: "I am furious that people celebrate autism acceptance. My child suffers from autism and needs a cure.”

Considering autism a curable disease is misinformed thinking. High-support autistic people have always been part of society. 3/
Read 22 tweets
30 Sep 20
Autistic distress behavior is then perceived as non-compliance & the kids get punished for "misbehaving." And THEN the parents publicly complain about the kids, focusing on how awful autism is for the parents—rather than on the tragedy of autistic kids' needs being overlooked. 6/
I can't blame parents of autistic children for being pissed off in general, because our kids' and families' rights, supports, and services needs are rarely sufficiently addressed: We ALL feel disenfranchised, because we ARE all disenfranchised. 7/
But this sorry state of autism & family supports is also why, as non-disabled parent, I look to developmental disability organizations like @autselfadvocacy and @TheArcUS for their insider disability experience and knowledge about how to address disability disenfranchisement. 8/
Read 7 tweets

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