Over the weekend we spent a happy few hours in the loft room with my Lego collection, which is embarrassingly vast. I have taught her to respect Lego and the small pieces involved, so she is now very confident with it, and I with her treatment of it. She doesn’t try to eat it or break the pieces, but is beginning to build simple structures. She is totally over Duplo, viewing it as clumsy and unsophisticated. We were sitting in companionly silence, snow slowly layering on the overhead skylights, both completely focused on what we were doing, but taking an occasional interest in the other’s ‘work’. I was rebuilding something, and she was sorting out the heads and hats of the minifigures before putting them all on seats on a rudimentary 2-wheeled bus that she had constructed herself, to my quiet and overwhelming pride. Every now and then she would ask for help with a particularly fiddly task, and occasionally I would ask her how her project was going, but for the most part we were in our own worlds and yet completely together, simultaneously. I felt tremendously relaxed and calm.
Being a parent with Asperger’s can be extremely challenging, so I think it is important to highlight these positives. Being autistic has allowed me an insight into her young mind that I suppose other parents may not get so clearly. I understand the value of obsessing over details, studying differences, total immersion and repetitive tasks as they bring me comfort in the same way as they are helping her learn. This does not mean that autistic people are children – far from it. I think it is more that we never lose that youthful ability to focus on something completely and cut out the white noise and the nonsense that could distract us. I hope this continues for a time, though I am mindful that as she gets older she will, presumably, begin to lose her appetite for these activities: I will make the most of this while it lasts.
Buy me a coffee!
No comments:
Post a Comment