Autism & Being A Control Freak
Each of my sons have a controlling nature, everything must go their way or they immediately become vocal about their displeasure and lack of patience / understanding.
One son in particular has it worst than the others and by definition he is very much a control freak where the most ridiculous things must go his way - it is very stressful to deal with this daily because in essence you cannot satisfy the whims and fancies he literally creates during the day. If you are the parent of an autistic child that is a control freak please share your experiences.
It's all about how kids on the spectrum manage their anxiety. That's why they exercise control. It's not because they are trying to be a pain in the rear end.
My kid needs to know where we are gong and what we are doing - all the time.
He has a problem with transitions. So now I tell him "Hey son, we are going to be going to Costco in the next ten minutes" And that seems to help.
I wonder JB if your son has some sort of sensory disorder as well. As I watch my child who has a hard time with loud noises he himself can be extraordinarily loud and vocal. It's really weird. For the longest time he could only walk on the outside perimeter of a room he could never walk through around. He wanted all the furniture pushed towards the center of the room so he could walk around the outside. In therapy we worked predominately with distress tolerance.
The control part is difficult for me because I find myself wanting to for lack of a better word "Retaliate" ( just being very honest) by being controlling in my own way which doesn't help one bit. I then have to think about the fact that I am managing my own anxiety because I'm feeling anxious about the controlling nature that my son can be sometimes.
His big thing that we struggle with is under reporting - that has gotten worse with puberty. My son is going to be 14 and adolescence is just killing me.
I have to use a lot of alternative directions to get my own away from whatever he wants to do that is not appropriate. Sadly, I think the main problem is that our little autistic bundle of joy tends to have his timing out of sync. Its not what he wants to do is so bad but just the time he wants to do it. Hopefully it gets better as he grows at least that's what I hope.
Being in control beings peace of mind. Just think of what the opposite: out of control. Its hard to see this because we're already in control of ourselves but for the child with autism everything appears in chaoss and they need to set it in order.