Asperger
Syndrome and Mom's Secret Weapon
By Dan
Coulter
This is for all
the moms of children with Asperger Syndrome.
Want to be more
effective in helping your child? Want to give him the best possible
training to deal with AS and succeed? Then you need to access a
secret weapon.
You.
Your immediate
reaction may be, "Yeah, right! I'm already doing everything I can.
More than I can! In fact, I'm so stressed that just the thought of
doing more threatens to shut me down."
But I bet
you're overlooking something. Over the years since our son was
diagnosed, I've talked with a lot of mothers of kids with AS. And
I've watched my wife, who, like most AS moms, has taken on the main
burden of researching AS and dealing with schools, doctors and on and
on and on. A common thread that ties many of these moms together is
frustration. Look at AS online discussion boards and see how often
moms talk about failing and being discouraged day after day.
But how many
are truly failing? I think these moms care so passionately about
their kids and want them to succeed so badly that they don't give
themselves enough credit for what they're accomplishing.
If you have a
goal for your child and you don't reach that goal, do you give
yourself credit for the progress you helped your child make toward
that goal? If you try your hardest to reach the top of a mountain and
you make it halfway up, did you fail? YOU MADE IT HALFWAY UP A
MOUNTAIN! And maybe you established a basecamp to help you reach the
top in the future.
Like many AS
moms I've met, my wife easily qualifies for sainthood. Over the
years, she's worked closely with our son, Drew, and with teachers and
principals and psychologists and support groups and more. Drew is now
living three hours away from us in college. He's making good grades
and has friends. And my wife still frets over the messy state of his
dorm room and worries she should have gotten him more "executive
function" training.
My point is
that no matter how much or how little progress you make, it's easy to
overlook that progress and focus on falling short of perfection. My
wife told me about hearing a psychologist warn, "Don't 'should' on
yourself." That's always obsessing: "I should have done this," or "If
I'd only done that."
Focusing on
failure is depressing. It robs you of energy and generates stress.
On the other hand, don't you feel good when you succeed? Don't you
feel energized and optimistic? Don't you have better ideas and relate
better to people?
That's the
secret weapon. And you can legitimately tap into it if you just break
down your objectives and goals into steps and give yourself credit for
every step you and your child make toward success.
I've seen the
results with kids. Praise their progress and they work harder to
reach a goal. Criticize them and they tend to shut down and avoid
even trying. The same thing works for us. If you focus on feeling
good about progress instead of criticizing yourself for failure, your
secret weapon kicks in.
Don't get me
wrong. I'm not saying set low goals and be happy with mediocrity.
I'm saying that giving yourself legitimate credit can put you into a
positive frame of mind that gives you energy and better ideas. And if
you have a positive attitude and energy when "Plan A" falls short,
you're more likely to try "Plan B" -- and "Plan C" and "Plan D." My
son has already exceeded expectations so many times I can't count
them. In big ways and in small ways. And if I've played a
significant part, it's because my wife helped me see the role I needed
to play.
Them wives are
heaven-sent.
So set your
goals high. Help your child find the best in himself. Help her find
the best in others. Don't settle for less than your best. But you
may be the only person in a position to truly appreciate all you're
doing for your child. So step back occasionally. Look at the
progress you've made in the face of pretty stiff obstacles. And give
yourself a pat on the back. I'm betting you deserve a lot more than
that -- and I hope you see your reward in the eyes of your child every
Mother's Day for the rest of your life.
ABOUT THE
AUTHOR - Dan Coulter
and his wife, Julie, produce videos to help people with Asperger
Syndrome and autism. Their website is www.coultervideo.com.
Copyright 2004
Dan Coulter All Rights Reserved Used by
Permission