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Tuesday, June 4, 2013

On Not Assuming

Roses are red
Violets are blue
I assume much 
And so do You!

I thought I wasn't the type of person that assumed a lot about other people but, my son sure taught me a lesson on that one.  I certainly assumed a lot about him...I could probably write a book about it.  Perhaps in the future I will write other posts about it but, for today, I am just going to write about how we assume what someone is thinking.  We often look at how someone acts or what they are saying as a guage.  If someone is screaming at another person they are probably angry, though some get quiet when they are angry.

When it comes to autism those signals are sometimes really messed up.  I recently talked to someone who knew a child with non verbal autism and when he began to learn the rapid prompting method (it is a way to help people communicate) they found he had taught himself to read and do math.  He learned this while sitting in the kitchen as his sister did her homework.  The parents had no idea all that was going on inside his head.  Oh, and don't assume because some kids do this, that they all can.  There are kids whose receptive language skills remain that of a toddler.

Sometimes it appears as if people with "high-functioning" autism have no remorse at all when they do something wrong.  I used to assume this about my son.  I have found that it is not true at all.  For years he showed no empathy, no remorse, even laughing when he broke something or hit someone.  It turns out that he will often laugh when he is nervous or feels bad.  All those years that I felt so frustrated and hopeless at his behavior and he felt bad all along.

I still get angry when I shouldn't; assuming that he has control over certain behaviors that he does not.  I often feel guilty for my frustrations.  It is so confusing sometimes.  When do I give consequences and when do I not?  How do I know when I am just punishing him for something out of his control?  What is he getting away with that is in his control when I back off the consequences?

The point is - we shouldn't make assumptions about other people!  With 1 in 50 diagnosed with autism, chances are that you run into at least one person on the spectrum on a regular basis.  Don't assume, even when you think their behavior, their speech or lack of speech is giving you a clear indication of their thoughts.  You and I could be completely wrong. 


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