Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Autistic DS9 - DH has “had enough”

429 replies

Vinvertebrate · 03/04/2025 00:38

Really need the hive mind on this because I can’t think straight. (For full disclosure, I had major surgery a week ago and I’m still physically/emotionally wobbly).

DS9 was diagnosed autistic at 3, and has many related ND conditions, including ADHD, dyspraxia, sensory processing disorder and PDA. He attended PT nursery from 9 months, and his differences were flagged straight away. Things like not parallel playing, avoiding noise, food/sleep refusal, repetitive movements, lashing out at peers etc. He was thrown out of the local prep after Reception, which he only got through with a reduced timetable and a FT 1:1 from pre-school onwards. He then went to a MS state primary, which also “could not meet need” and is finally in a specialist school, which he (thankfully) loves.

I’m as sure as i can be that DS does not simply need better discipline, and his differences are innate. I’ve been through denial, shame, grief, disappointment and finally resignation. DS is bright, affectionate, chatty, happy, but very challenging and still has meltdowns/violent outbursts.

I have a FT job and some caring responsibilities for a family member. I pick up all the slack with DS’ AN - school, LA/EHCP, pediatrician, OT, Ed Psych, SALT etc.

DH has been hectoring DS tonight over lots of small things - accidentally missing the toilet whilst weeing, not eating tea, a broken kitchen item. DS has been in tears, and I’ve tried to smooth it over, but ultimately DS lost it and socked DH in the face. DS was immediately contrite and tearful. After DS went to sleep, DH sat down on the bed and calmly told me that he couldn’t do this anymore, that he’d never wanted a child (I was definitely more keen than him tbf), and that having DS had ruined his life. I asked him to clarify what he meant and he said “I don’t want this. I don’t want him”. I said that he was making me wonder whether I should get DS away from him for DS’ psychological protection, and he said “I wish you would”. He made it clear that he believes my parenting is to blame for DS’ behaviour.

I’m just sitting here blindsided. I’m NT (afaik) but I was abandoned by my dad at a similar age and I am heartbroken for DS. I know DS is hard work, but if his own dad can’t say anything positive then what hope is there? I’ve always known I’d have to protect DS from the world, but I didn’t expect DH to be amongst the first to take a swipe at him.

I’d be grateful for any advice or anyone willing to share thoughts or similar experiences. and thanks for reading if you’ve got this far.

OP posts:
Wildflowers99 · 06/04/2025 19:51

Lovelysausagedogscrumpy · 05/04/2025 17:32

The child is nine. He lashed out in response to the way his dad was treating him. A dad who hasn’t bothered to find out anything about his son’s disability, and doesn’t engage with medical visits - and prefers to think of it as OP’s parenting causing bad behaviour instead of admitting his sons’ autism. To the point of photoshopping photographs of his son so that none of his peers will know he goes to special school. He’s ashamed of his own son and is leaving the bulk of the ‘pressure’ to OP. So lets’ not kid ourselves that this is the childs’ fault shall we ? So many posters trying to excuse a shit father at the expense of a disabled child.

Edited

Disability or not, being attacked regularly for years would have a very negative effect on anyone’s mental health. The reason for the attacks doesn’t change how distressing they are for the victim. There seems to be an expectation that every would-be parent should have a genuine understanding of what it would mean to give their lives up to a disabled child, but nobody can truly know this until it happens.

selffellatingouroborosofhate · 06/04/2025 23:04

Wildflowers99 · 06/04/2025 19:51

Disability or not, being attacked regularly for years would have a very negative effect on anyone’s mental health. The reason for the attacks doesn’t change how distressing they are for the victim. There seems to be an expectation that every would-be parent should have a genuine understanding of what it would mean to give their lives up to a disabled child, but nobody can truly know this until it happens.

It's the OP, not her husband, who gets most of the violence. Yet she's the one sticking by their son.

Lovelysausagedogscrumpy · 07/04/2025 18:01

Wildflowers99 · 06/04/2025 19:51

Disability or not, being attacked regularly for years would have a very negative effect on anyone’s mental health. The reason for the attacks doesn’t change how distressing they are for the victim. There seems to be an expectation that every would-be parent should have a genuine understanding of what it would mean to give their lives up to a disabled child, but nobody can truly know this until it happens.

They went through IVF. He would have had extensive counselling and multiple opportunities not to continue if all he wanted was a perfect child. If you read the OP and updates everything screams that DH hasn’t accepted his childs’ disability and is ashamed of it. He hasn’t engaged with any of the support or medical professionals and as a result he clearly continues to behave in ways that trigger the child to lash out. Frankly if he can’t be arsed to even make an effort then he deserves everything he gets. OP is better off without him.

Christmaschildcare · 01/07/2025 20:40

How are things @Vinvertebrate x

New posts on this thread. Refresh page