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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To have not made her dinner

39 replies

BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 20:55

DD2 is 16. Its just me and her DD1 is at uni. I have been a single parent since she was born.
I work 3 long days getting in about 7. We have 2 veggie goustos a week as DD2 is veggie to have something easy to prepare and some veggie variety. In the hopes that she will get it going on some days. This rarely happens.
I got in this evening. She has been in bed since she got home from school.
I asked what she wanted for dinner. She didn't fancy either of the goustos. She didn't want anything offered. Jackets, pasta, noodles, sausages, soup, beans on toast....
In the end I said well I'm having a tin of soup and some crusty part baked rolls.
She's just stormed down and is making a variety of freezer food. Which I could have done for her. She's in a strop.
Not to drip feed. She has some ALN (mild ASD and ADHD) and is doing some GCSEs so is stressed and overwhelmed. I have been calm and not annoyed. Not sure what else I could have done?

OP posts:
GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 13/11/2023 22:26

I don’t think there was any major unreasonableness going on from anyone here.

She is stressed and her ASD and ADHD are contributing. Lots of NT teenagers would also be stressed by this but the ND will make it worse and also make it different - and different from person to person.

You offered lots of options meaning to be kind but this might have made it harder to make a decision.

Another time perhaps just say “I’m making this” and make it. If it’s something she likes.

I don’t think any massive harm was done.

BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 22:32

Thanks for the input. I think the ND mums get it.
The somewhat patronising lolling comments are the joys that is AIBU.
I didn't say it was linear or that she was at one end or the other. She has an excellent NHS Psychologist thank you and we have worked very hard at helping her self regulate.
I am well aware that she masks all day at school and struggles to self regulate.
The "mild" was more in reference to the fact that she is usually excellent at self regulating and managing school and life (which I'm sure we all want for our ND children).
I think I was BU for offering her too many options in an attempt to help and then getting annoyed. IWNBU for not actually making it and she did really well to come down and do it herself.
She's gone back to bed because my breathing was distressing her...

OP posts:
TeenLifeMum · 13/11/2023 22:34

Dd1 currently doing mocks. I’ve briefed dh and her younger sisters that they are to handle with care. It’s a lot of pressure so we are all on a mission to lighten the mood at home for dd1. That said, dd did the washing up tonight without being asked (dishwasher broken and waiting for an engineer). I’d set days dd cooks so the boundaries and opportunities to succeed are really clear for her.

noisyfrodge · 13/11/2023 22:36

Just to be clear in case you mean me I didn't intend to be patronising. I am parent to 3 autistic children and autistic myself. I'm not very good at getting what I want to say written down effectively so I'm glad some others came along to say what I wasn't able to.

I genuinely didn't mean anything bad there

TeenLifeMum · 13/11/2023 22:37

Haha, your last post! dd3 annoys dd1 by existing near her so her plan is to not argue (like she usually does) when dd1 says “stop breathing so loud”! Dd2 gets away with anything and is actually the really loud one.

BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 22:44

TeenLifeMum · 13/11/2023 22:37

Haha, your last post! dd3 annoys dd1 by existing near her so her plan is to not argue (like she usually does) when dd1 says “stop breathing so loud”! Dd2 gets away with anything and is actually the really loud one.

My breathing, chewing, swallowing, rubbing my feet all distress (annoy) her. Its just the 2 of us and I'm NT so I have to work really hard not to take it personally.
For clarity I don't do any of those things loudly!!

OP posts:
BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 22:46

noisyfrodge · 13/11/2023 22:36

Just to be clear in case you mean me I didn't intend to be patronising. I am parent to 3 autistic children and autistic myself. I'm not very good at getting what I want to say written down effectively so I'm glad some others came along to say what I wasn't able to.

I genuinely didn't mean anything bad there

Thank you. It's easy to take offense on here especially when I have worked so hard to understand ND and manage it. I already feel bad that I didn't recognise it till she was in high school and really struggling.

OP posts:
EvilElsa · 13/11/2023 22:47

DS is autistic and 16. I tend to just make a meal and he will eat it -if I offer up option after option he will refuse or say no etc. He can be overwhelmed by the choice especially if he has a lot going on. If I just do it and call him down he finds that easier. Some days he will ask for something in particular which we will do (he does help cook sometimes) but if it's a harder day I carry on.
DS is also doing his mocks so I get it! Luckily he's pretty chilled currently as he actually enjoys the peace and quiet of exams.

CandyLeBonBon · 13/11/2023 22:50

BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 22:32

Thanks for the input. I think the ND mums get it.
The somewhat patronising lolling comments are the joys that is AIBU.
I didn't say it was linear or that she was at one end or the other. She has an excellent NHS Psychologist thank you and we have worked very hard at helping her self regulate.
I am well aware that she masks all day at school and struggles to self regulate.
The "mild" was more in reference to the fact that she is usually excellent at self regulating and managing school and life (which I'm sure we all want for our ND children).
I think I was BU for offering her too many options in an attempt to help and then getting annoyed. IWNBU for not actually making it and she did really well to come down and do it herself.
She's gone back to bed because my breathing was distressing her...

Edited

Sorry op I did lol but thought it was a bit unhelpful so asked for my post to be removed. I have an asd son and get tired of people spouting the 'mild' thing and my thoughts got the better of me!

motherofawhirlwind · 13/11/2023 22:52

I get it OP. And as someone else says - if mine is in that mood (ASD + ADHD also) I just make something I know she likes and put it in front of her. TV on so she can't hear herself chewing. Chat. Let her use her phone too. It'll get eaten 99/100.

Vanillatablet · 13/11/2023 22:53

Try using declarative language "I am making the Gousto now" instead of "what would you like for dinner?" then she can choose to join you or do her own thing. The amount of options is a nightmare for anyone with executive dysfunction.

muchalover · 13/11/2023 23:01

If you are referring to me I also have ND children. All of them have ADHD and one is autistic too.

BlackTuesday · 14/11/2023 09:42

BurnoutGP · 13/11/2023 22:32

Thanks for the input. I think the ND mums get it.
The somewhat patronising lolling comments are the joys that is AIBU.
I didn't say it was linear or that she was at one end or the other. She has an excellent NHS Psychologist thank you and we have worked very hard at helping her self regulate.
I am well aware that she masks all day at school and struggles to self regulate.
The "mild" was more in reference to the fact that she is usually excellent at self regulating and managing school and life (which I'm sure we all want for our ND children).
I think I was BU for offering her too many options in an attempt to help and then getting annoyed. IWNBU for not actually making it and she did really well to come down and do it herself.
She's gone back to bed because my breathing was distressing her...

Edited

You said “she is on the milder end”.

TheClitterati · 14/11/2023 23:33

My dd is also doing GCSE mocks right now & also had a strop over dinner.

Stay calm, keep going. 🤩

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