Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 Hello, I have the same problem with my AS child. Here is her sleep routine: I get her to school, I pick her up,I take her for something to eat on the way home, we get home and she goes straigth upstairs and goes to sleep. She wakes aruond 10pm or 11pm, is up for about oh..2 hours?, then goes to sleep again. Then at 7am in the morning, I wake up, and start regularly calling to her and waking her up, letting her know the time each time, and telling her to get up and get dressed for school...over and over....until she gets downright mean, cranky, nasty, and finally gets dressed at last second, and she ends up about 5mins late to school. Ive talked to her therapist about this. She said that I should go to bed at my own reguular time instead of staying up to keep an eye on my daughter. At least mom would get some normal sleep and be on a normal sleep cycle. Brilliant idea so far,, so when I tell my daughter " im going to sleep now , good nite " , and go to bed, within about 10minutes she turns off the tv and goes to her room and eventually falls back asleep. So it definitely helps to stick to y our own sleep schedule, though I know its hard at first to do it, but DO it. As far as getting HER up in morning for school, I just keep reminding my daughter of some positive or interesting thing that is going on that day, like a huge snow storm outside, or some class trip, or whatever. No matter what, I know I will get the stubborness and basic refusal to get up, but she simply has to anyways. I have started a new technique, and the school is impressed witht his parental idea too. However much time my daughter is late getting to school? I make her wait in the office there after school, for the same amount of time, before I show up to pick her up. Its working, she tries a bit more now, to not be late. Kids HATE having to stay after school (grin). Tomorrow is her last day of school; after that, I will continue the wake up process but let her sleep in until about 10am instead. I want to note, that her sleep cycle isn't all that bad. There are a few good things about it. First off, my husband and I actually have quiet time for ourselves together while she sleeps after school, where we can talk together, run errands, or even just get outside and work in the yard a bit. It gives us time to de-stress and relax some before she wakes up agian. Also, shes noticing that we are spending some time together, relaxing, and shes not going right to sleep as soon as she gets home, every single day now. These are interesting points to think about; makes me think that sometimes we get too focused on trying to help our AS child, to where we begin to lose sight of the family structure, or our own personal time to de-stress as well. Sometimes things get so stressed when we have to stay on top of her special needs and performance at school, that there is no clear break noticeable, when they get home from school each day. (especially with the homework battlezone each day, which should NOT have to be a ''battlezone''.) These are just my thoughts, and a few steps I have tried, that seem to work for our AS child and our family. We allll love it when its summer break time : ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 , I am by no means a doctor. But I use to work with several young adults with severe behavioral problems, some had AS. What we did was simply do controlled natural consequences for the person that misbehaved. We would set up a schedule with them and let them know that they must stick to the schedule or their day will not go well and try to explain why. Let them experience real life if they get up whenever and go to bed whenever. What happens to us when we get up late? We would miss the bus, get fired, miss breakfast, not have time to take a shower, our whole lives would be messed up. Let her experience some of that now, as well as the joys and consequences of doing what she is suppose to do when she does things correctly. Tell her when mealtimes are, if she isn't there, she missed it, bread and water for her. Tell her when the hot water will be on, she misses it, cold shower for her. Tell her when bed time is, if she stays up, power goes off in her room at that time. If she wants to sit in the dark, she does so not on your dime. She will learn if she wants a hot shower, decent food, and entertainment during the hours she is awake, she will quickly learn what hours she needs to be awake to be most beneficial to her. Otherwise, all she can take cold showers, sit in the dark for hours every night, and eat cold leftovers and bread. All you have to do is remember to turn off and on the power at the same time everyday, no matter what she says or does, and be willing to be patient as she tries everything to try and control you not to. Just my advice, you know your child better than I, but this is just something I would try. I cannot stand my neighbors daughter's that blast their music all night. I so have been tempted to sneak over there and turn off their power so I could get some sleep. Take Care, and I wish you luck, Donovan J Arnold mary44mary44 <mary44mary44@...> wrote: Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 <cmcintosh5@...> wrote: You have described my son to a T!!! I swear.. Mornings.. If his butt was on fire.. That kid wouldn't rush for anything.. Drives me completely bonkers!!! -- ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 Yes their mind keeps working all the time. That is what three different doctors told me. Both of mine are on medicine to help. One to get to sleep and the other his behavior was unmanagable because he would not get enough sleep. Now I can tell the next day when he missed it. <cmcintosh5@...> wrote: You have described my son to a T!!! I swear.. Mornings.. If his butt was on fire.. That kid wouldn't rush for anything.. Drives me completely bonkers!!! -- ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 You have described my son to a T!!! I swear.. Mornings.. If his butt was on fire.. That kid wouldn't rush for anything.. Drives me completely bonkers!!! -- ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 Hi , We didn't have too much of a problem with bedtime, but getting up was another story. Oh my. (It's much better now. He's 18 and gets up on his own now, no big deal.) But for years, I approached him the way I'd approach a wild tiger in a zoo. I'd poke my finger through the bars and shake him awake, tell him quietly that in fifteen minutes he had to get up, then beat a hasty retreat before he could throw something at me. (I wouldn't really poke a finger at a tiger, you know what I mean...) He'd usually get in a GO AWAY before I got out of the room. In fifteen minutes, I'd go back and ask him if he wanted to put on his shorts first or his shirt first. After some grumbling, the shorts went on. And so on. So you see, you are not alone. Liz On Jun 8, 2006, at 3:36 AM, mary44mary44 wrote: > Hi all, > My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams > for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when > she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as > she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common > with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? > > Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 My son is also hard to get up in the morning... he wants to sleep all day and stay up all night. I used to make him go to school anyhow, but they just kept sending him home, so I would ground him from the computer...or take the cords to his xbox, I set a timer on his cable box so it goes off at the same time every night... no tv past 11 pm, but he just waits til I go to bed and watches it in the living room... so not sure what to tell you! All I know is it is common... your doctor may be able to give you some medication to help her sleep at night... but if she's like my son, he can force himself to stay up anyhow! Good luck! ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 At Thu Jun 8, 2006, " Donovan Arnold " donovanjarnold2005@... wrote: > > Tell her when mealtimes are, if she isn't there, she missed it, > bread and water for her. Tell her when the hot water will be on, > she misses it, cold shower for her. Tell her when bed time is, if > she stays up, power goes off in her room at that time. If she > wants to sit in the dark, she does so not on your dime. Donovan with all due respect, this seems just a bit harsh to me. And I'm the 'tough one' in our family - which is why our kids say that Mommy's nice and Daddy's mean. Could it be that your approach comes from working with people in some sort of institutional setting vs. in the home? I would not want to be this rough with one of my children... at least I pray things never get to the point where I felt that kind of treatment was called for. Just my two cents and hope you don't mind my saying that. > She will learn if she wants a hot shower, decent food, and > entertainment during the hours she is awake, she will quickly > learn what hours she needs to be awake to be most beneficial to her. OTOH this does remind me of when I rented an attic apartment in Brooklyn as a young single person. My landlord and I both caught the 7:00 am bus to the city and I'd always find myself taking an uncomfortably cool shower in the morning. I was always rushing to get out the door too, pushing the snooze button right to the limit. I complained to Barry one morning and his response was " I had plenty of hot water " . The next morning I made a point of getting up 20 minutes earlier than usual and got to take a looong hot shower - it felt so nice. Acting on a hunch I complained again on the walk to the bus to my landlord that I had to take a cold shower and he replied " Nobody had hot water this morning. " Never had a problem with the hot water again in that apartment. Marty <who apologizes for going off on a tangent there> -- Asperger's/High Functioning Autism Homeschooler's discussion list as-hfa-homeschool/ Mainstreaming Experiences & Strategies MainstreamingDisabledKids/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 This has nothing to do with the sleep issue, but Tami, if you are looking for a way to keep your son from watching television or using xbox, we discovered a simple method. Buy a small luggage lock (they come in packs of two) and put the shaft of the tiny padlock through the hole in the plug -- can't be plugged in! My guy gets fairly ingenious about finding the keys and hiding the locks or throwing them out the window etc., but for the most part, this is how we manage hassle-free no-screen times. ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 8, 2006 Report Share Posted June 8, 2006 My understanding is that sleep problems go hand-in-hand with AS. My son has always had a hard time falling asleep and staying asleep through the night. I had him scheduled for a sleep study last week, but they cancelled it earlier that day because the Dr failed to complete the paperwork to stay in-network with our ins co. That is absolutely our luck. LOL. Anyway, I'm waiting to find out what the study will say whenever he gets back in-network. Otherwise, I'll schedule it with CHOP, but their sleep clinic isn't very conducive to sleep whereas the other one is set up like a nice hotel room. His Dev Ped recommended Melatonin. It didn't do much for us, but I've heard good things about it from others ( " normal " adults). Debbie (in NJ) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 My 15 year old is very similar. I think it has alot to do with being a teenager and then add Asperger's onto of that and it gets even more complicated. Pam Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 I really think, that the gist of what Donovan is saying is, have more clearly defined structured time for an AS child. In alot of the AS reading I have seen it totes the concept of " structure " for AS kids, clearly defining the lines of conduct in different settings, making it easier for the child to understand what is expected of them. Perhaps some kids would respond before the the ultimate discipliness he named, such as no food after a specific dinnertime is missed. Taking into account how creative and high IQ my own AS has, I have to chuckle because I can picture her now, managing just fine to get around most of the examples Donovan named lol. For a missed say...dinnertime, what I do is... well you know what? I let her cook her own food if I don't feel like dropping everything at the moment she wants Kentucky fried and rushing her to that fast foods place. I can let my child who is 16, cook her own food because she only EATS certain foods, ones that are easily prepared. I have taught her how to prepare the foods she likes, and one day when she was old enough and had been supervised at it for awhile I told her, " You know what? I have laundry to do, YOU cook your own hotdogs! " So she did, and has been ever since. Mind you, I taught her safety issues also, like how to put out a fire quickly, and how not to get burned, and so on. She is quite happy to BE ABLE to prepare her own foods. She also bakes her own buscuits from those pillsbury tubes you can buy? (because that is another food item she'll eat). So far she has never forgotten to turn off stove, or over, and hasn't gotten burned too badly. (ie, once she forgot to use a oven mitt, but only slightly burned her finger, and I might add, has never forgotten that experience since, and uses a oven mitt all the time now.) At 16, my daughter now does her own laundry. (chuckles) She does one small load maybe every week and I do the usual rest. I certainly support her doing things on her own, these are all transitional types of skills shes learning. Occasionally she'll clean her own room somewhat, when the clothes pile up around her and bothers her enough for even HER to notice. I used to slip into her room and grab up the clothes to wash for her, butnow she does seem to be trying a bit more at maintaining a level of cleanliness even in her room. (Hail !!) lol, I am sitting here typing all this with a grin, but I know the " hell " we have gone through to get her to this point. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 Hello, Wow. I was so happy to read so many helpful responses. Everyone had great ideas. Thank you. I must try them, as things are pretty out of control. One night last week, I woke up at 4:00 in the morning to get some water and my dd was STILL awake, at the computer. I thought she had gone to bed. Another time, I caught her watching TV in the basement at 2:00 in the morning. So, all your ideas about some more structure are making a lot of sense right now. w/ teenage aspie daughter > > My 15 year old is very similar. I think it has alot to do with being a > teenager and then add Asperger's onto of that and it gets even more complicated. > Pam > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 Been there, doing that! I have tried to do the relaxing bath time (Still doing that) My 12 year old is as big as me, so he has to use our big bubbling tub. Husband hates it so it rarely happens. I also have been using melatonin. That seems to help, (with the bath and quiet time) They boys would be asleep within 1/2 hour in a relaxing setting (T.V. off!) That is hard. But at least they got to sleep. My problem, my oldest was up early 92,4,6) BUT I think I will try again to see if it evens out. Hope this helps!! *smiles* B > > My son is also hard to get up in the morning... he wants to sleep all day and stay up all night. I used to make him go to school anyhow, but they just kept sending him home, so I would ground him from the computer...or take the cords to his xbox, I set a timer on his cable box so it goes off at the same time every night... no tv past 11 pm, but he just waits til I go to bed and watches it in the living room... so not sure what to tell you! All I know is it is common... your doctor may be able to give you some medication to help her sleep at night... but if she's like my son, he can force himself to stay up anyhow! Good luck! > ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed > > > Hi all, > My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams > for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when > she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as > she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common > with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? > > Thanks, > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 , I have always had an 8 p.m. bedtime for dd. That is at 8 p.m. she is to go to her room and stay there. When she was younger she had no t.v. or video games so this was her reading time. It kept me sane and allowed me to get my sleep. I also try to keep her on the same schedule on weekends as during the week and during the summer. That has never worked for the entire summer so in August I started with the early bedtimes again. I agree it's a constant struggle, but this has worked best for me. mary44mary44 <mary44mary44@...> wrote: Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 \\ofbeans <kehecho@...> wrote: help the child tack it to thedocter or call911for help mack the child be ok its my understanding i jest help thee poor child alest help her or him tiff I really think, that the gist of what Donovan is saying is, have more clearly defined structured time for an AS child. In alot of the AS reading I have seen it totes the concept of " structure " for AS kids, clearly defining the lines of conduct in different settings, making it easier for the child to understand what is expected of them. Perhaps some kids would respond before the the ultimate discipliness he named, such as no food after a specific dinnertime is missed. Taking into account how creative and high IQ my own AS has, I have to chuckle because I can picture her now, managing just fine to get around most of the examples Donovan named lol. For a missed say...dinnertime, what I do is... well you know what? I let her cook her own food if I don't feel like dropping everything at the moment she wants Kentucky fried and rushing her to that fast foods place. I can let my child who is 16, cook her own food because she only EATS certain foods, ones that are easily prepared. I have taught her how to prepare the foods she likes, and one day when she was old enough and had been supervised at it for awhile I told her, " You know what? I have laundry to do, YOU cook your own hotdogs! " So she did, and has been ever since. Mind you, I taught her safety issues also, like how to put out a fire quickly, and how not to get burned, and so on. She is quite happy to BE ABLE to prepare her own foods. She also bakes her own buscuits from those pillsbury tubes you can buy? (because that is another food item she'll eat). So far she has never forgotten to turn off stove, or over, and hasn't gotten burned too badly. (ie, once she forgot to use a oven mitt, but only slightly burned her finger, and I might add, has never forgotten that experience since, and uses a oven mitt all the time now.) At 16, my daughter now does her own laundry. (chuckles) She does one small load maybe every week and I do the usual rest. I certainly support her doing things on her own, these are all transitional types of skills shes learning. Occasionally she'll clean her own room somewhat, when the clothes pile up around her and bothers her enough for even HER to notice. I used to slip into her room and grab up the clothes to wash for her, butnow she does seem to be trying a bit more at maintaining a level of cleanliness even in her room. (Hail !!) lol, I am sitting here typing all this with a grin, but I know the " hell " we have gone through to get her to this point. __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 9, 2006 Report Share Posted June 9, 2006 your rong not leting your child have a good life not right at all i dont get it when parints and teachers fit with the childeran when the child tells them somthing they ither get mad at them or therat at all as kids need lots of love my story to you is love and understand your the parint not the child you wish the chi,ld gets better but know they wont get better at all if you keep one doing what your are doing ! tiff Heifner <blueareviolets@...> wrote: , I have always had an 8 p.m. bedtime for dd. That is at 8 p.m. she is to go to her room and stay there. When she was younger she had no t.v. or video games so this was her reading time. It kept me sane and allowed me to get my sleep. I also try to keep her on the same schedule on weekends as during the week and during the summer. That has never worked for the entire summer so in August I started with the early bedtimes again. I agree it's a constant struggle, but this has worked best for me. mary44mary44 <mary44mary44@...> wrote: Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 10, 2006 Report Share Posted June 10, 2006 We use medication - clonidine. If he gets enough sleep, he can get up without being grumpy. Roxanna Autism Happens _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of mary44mary44 Sent: Thursday, June 08, 2006 6:37 AM Subject: ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed Hi all, My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? Thanks, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 10, 2006 Report Share Posted June 10, 2006 Donovan, I don't recommend this method as severely as you have written it. However, there are some good parts. It is always great to have natural consequences whenever possible. But with sleep problems, it is often more than " just " misbehavior at work. I have two boys with HFA and both have had sleep problems from around age 1. We have used medication with great success. My older one is 17 yo now and he asks to get his meds refilled on a regular basis because he can't get to sleep otherwise. If he were doing it on purpose, he would not take the meds and just not sleep. In addition, if he missed school due to not sleeping, he would not care. So we have to make sure the consequences are going to make a dent or else we are just shooting ourselves in the foot. As for the neighbors with the loud music, ask them to turn it down by 10 pm and if they don't, call the police and let them deal with the problem. You shouldn't have to suffer with that all night! Roxanna Autism Happens _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of Donovan Arnold Sent: Thursday, June 08, 2006 8:27 AM Subject: Re: ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed , I am by no means a doctor. But I use to work with several young adults with severe behavioral problems, some had AS. What we did was simply do controlled natural consequences for the person that misbehaved. We would set up a schedule with them and let them know that they must stick to the schedule or their day will not go well and try to explain why. Let them experience real life if they get up whenever and go to bed whenever. What happens to us when we get up late? We would miss the bus, get fired, miss breakfast, not have time to take a shower, our whole lives would be messed up. Let her experience some of that now, as well as the joys and consequences of doing what she is suppose to do when she does things correctly. Tell her when mealtimes are, if she isn't there, she missed it, bread and water for her. Tell her when the hot water will be on, she misses it, cold shower for her. Tell her when bed time is, if she stays up, power goes off in her room at that time. If she wants to sit in the dark, she does so not on your dime. She will learn if she wants a hot shower, decent food, and entertainment during the hours she is awake, she will quickly learn what hours she needs to be awake to be most beneficial to her. Otherwise, all she can take cold showers, sit in the dark for hours every night, and eat cold leftovers and bread. All you have to do is remember to turn off and on the power at the same time everyday, no matter what she says or does, and be willing to be patient as she tries everything to try and control you not to. Just my advice, you know your child better than I, but this is just something I would try. I cannot stand my neighbors daughter's that blast their music all night. I so have been tempted to sneak over there and turn off their power so I could get some sleep. Take Care, and I wish you luck, Donovan J Arnold Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 11, 2006 Report Share Posted June 11, 2006 Hello,,I am just letting you know how I handle the sleeping arrangments of my little aspie... BJ (who is 16) has NEVER slept...even as a baby,,2 hours and enough. BUT,,,BJ was happy to play quietly in his crib, or bed, or room. As he grew older, he just moved up in activitys, all solo, and always quiet. If he has an important reason to get up,,,he goes to bed earlier. BJ's bedtime is 9:00pm, and has been for years. He goes to bed on his own, (like law). At 9:01,,if he is still up,,panic starts in. Keeping him up later, makes no difference on sleep time. Still 2 hours at a time. On a good night, can get 2 hours,,then awake for awhile,,then 2 more !!! BJ takes no naps, and never has. BJ also takes prozack, only the last 2 months, but may or maynot continue. This made a big difference the first 2 weeks, slept 8-10 hours at a time, but was grouchy. Now, sleep is back to normal, (which is 2 hours). After taking the prozack for a week or so,,I went to wake BJ up, and he yelled at me. After he got up on his own, he came down and was sulky. I didnt talk to him, (you know when not to push it, right?)...after a few minutes, BJ ask what was wrong??? I said I tryed to wake you and you yelled at me,,,he was shocked. Very upset, and kept saying he was sorry. BJ has never yelled. so, now,,when I call him, he has a job, and must get up, you can hear his voice change from " dont want to get up " to ,, " I'm up !!! " , in a happy tone... I realy have it lucky!!! I know all our kids are so different and no one rule works on all aspies, but,,I got it good!!! I am learning to cope, not deal, but cope. To me, copeing with, is liveing with aspergers, and moving ahead. Dealing with it, is ignoring it till it fixes itself. I still hear stupid stuff, like my ex-mother in law tells me, if I loved BJ more, he wouldnt be this way, all he needs is more love. bullshi*, lol,,you cant love a child anymore, than I love BJ. BJ's manner is that of a 4 year old, he is sweet, and does anything to please you. He cant say mean things, or hurt anything. He catches flys and spiders, and takes them outside. He holds the door for everyone, he trys so hard to make people happy. Most kids, (Normal, whatever that is) at 16, are little heathens. Fast cars, and girlfriends, drinking,,and rude, and generally, real pains in the butts. As for me,,,I will keep what God gave me. BJ's IQ was tested last month, average for his age is 91, his was 135. Believe me, I am not bragging. I see his downfalls and his struggles. BJ has over 3000 Yu-Gi-Oh card completely menorized, and cant tell you the 12 months of the year. That will probley never get better,,but,,hey,,his strong points are stong, and everything else,,well,,for him, is just not important. Oh, and as for the daughter who is yelling at you...my " normal " daughter is just like you decribe,,,yells at me,,and hates my guts, (REALY!!!). She has hated me since birth, ok, maybe not that early, but seems like it. She is bullheaded, stubborn and selfish. Somedays, she is harder to love than you can imagine. First of May, she came home drunk, and I took her car away, for all running around except for school. 2 days later, she moved out. One of these cut off your face, inspite of your nose. Totally lost it, but,,she is 18... she did finish school, and now is stumbling along. She will have to hit rock botton, before I will be able to help her. For Tabetha, everthing she touches turns to gold, and I am seeing her blow it all. Hang in there...barbra > > We use medication - clonidine. If he gets enough sleep, he can get up > without being grumpy. > > > > Roxanna > > Autism Happens > > _____ > > From: > [mailto: ] On Behalf Of mary44mary44 > Sent: Thursday, June 08, 2006 6:37 AM > > Subject: ( ) Hard to get daughter out of bed > > > > Hi all, > My dd is very difficult to get out of bed in the morning. She screams > for me to get out of her bedroom. She absolutely must get up, when > she feels like it. She is difficult to chase to bed at midnight, as > she would even stay up later than that, if I let her. Is this common > with AS kids? How do some of you deal with this? > > Thanks, > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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