Happy
New Year to you all. Here’s hoping everyone had a restful
festive season filled with love and joy. I am looking forward to another year
of highlighting issues affecting individuals with autism and their families. There are still many people who don’t know
what autism is, and that is unfortunate seeing it’s a condition affecting quite
a sizeable population in the Kingdom of Swaziland. Hopefully as the year progresses, that
number dwindles as well. When people are
informed about the condition, they won’t be compelled to judge harshly when
they encounter affected individuals. Also, many parents are struggling with
their children at home and not seeking intervention because they don’t even
know their children have autism. Please take time to read up the condition.
There are countless online resources; you never know when that information
might come in handy.
One
day, Simphiwe*, whose son is autistic, was at a community meeting in Ngculwini when
a woman called out to her, “Make wemntfwana longaphile engcondvweni!” (Hey mother of the mentally ill child!") Simphiwe
said she was heartbroken by those words and did not understand why that woman
had simply not asked for her name. That’s how bad things can get when you come
across grossly insensitive and uninformed people.
It’s
not just strangers that stick daggers into the hearts of parents with autistic
children. Loved ones also do it. The festive season is one of the most awaited
times of the year when families get together and be merry. For families
affected by autism, it is usually a trying time. It is hard to participate in family and
social gatherings because sometimes autism comes with hyperactivity, sensory
issues and poor social skills. If the music is too loud, or the crowd too big, the
autistic child can have a meltdown or spend the day with his hands over his
ears. If you are the parent of such a child, it is difficult to turn a blind
eye to this and just have fun. You end up also having a distressful day either
trying to quell the meltdown or make your child comfortable if he’s in
distress. Given a choice of whether to spend the day in the company of family
yet not partaking in any of the activities because you have to keep an eye on
your child, and just staying at home where the child is used to his
surroundings, most parents would choose the latter. You stay at home with your
child, you don’t have to spend the day explaining his behaviour to anyone, and
your child is calmer because he is in his own turf. It does get lonely, though.
Sometimes staying away from functions can also be imposed on the family of the
autistic child. People might never want to invite you again for fear that your
child might break things or disturb the peace, be the “party pooper”,
basically.
At family functions there will always
be that aunt who will shout in front of everyone that if you spare the rod you
spoil the child, but people need to understand that no amount of beating will
control the negative behaviours that emanate from autism. It is a developmental
problem, not a parenting one. A Mbabane mother to an autistic girl said even
though she was naturally a sociable person, her child’s condition had
transformed her into an antisocial person. “If I go to a family
gathering and people are trying to converse with my daughter, how many people
am I going to explain to that, no she can’t have a conversation?” Between
managing your child’s behaviour and swallowing the lump on your throat caused
by all stinging comments being fired in your direction, there is usually not
enough time and energy to explain things.
Family
gatherings are also the time when family members share snippets of how well
their children are doing at school, what sports they are excelling at, and the
clever things they say. Meanwhile, you might still be trying to toilet-train a
6-year-old or trying to teach an 8-year-old to say “mum” or wave properly.
(Many children with autism take long to learn to use the toilet. An article on
Autism Speaks website attributed this to the general developmental delay that
many of them have, difficulty in breaking the long-established routine of
wearing diapers, and communication challenges. Some children with autism also
have delayed speech, with some finding their voices as late as 8 or 9 years of
age or never speaking at all.)
Sitting
in the middle of people exchanging progress reports about their typical
children is bound to make the parent of an autistic child left out and feeling
sorry for him/herself and their challenged offspring. The progress reports are
not even the worst of it. Things start to get really ugly when people start to
compare their children with your autistic one. I remember a time when my own
son was about 4 years old and still had a vocabulary of about 15 words. A
friend, whose son was less than 2 years old, dropped by and went on and on
about the intelligent things her son was already saying and how very balanced
he was for a little person his age. When she ran out of her stories, she
‘modestly’ said, “Oh listen to me going on about my clever child to a person
whose son can’t say anything!”
Of
course the festive season is gone, but there are still birthdays and other
smaller functions during the year. Do invite folks with an autism child too.
Ask them how best you can help to ensure both child and parents enjoy the
event. Not all autistic children break things, but if you know the particular
child you are inviting does break, rather move the breakables out of his reach than
shun his family. And don’t compare that
child with your own.
No comments:
Post a Comment