Coping
with the reality of severe autism:
General concepts for supporting emotionally fragile
individuals who display maladaptive patterns of
adjustment. How are care providers to support a
person who is not connected to others, who lives
in-the-immediate moment, who reflects and magnifies
other's emotions, and who has little continuity
of experience?
3. Defining and achieving realistic expectations.
A. Caregivers are responsible for maintaining
achievable expectations.
The goal is to constantly "set up"
successes so that the individual will obtain frequent
positive feedback. The goal is to constantly remind
the person of positive expectations, "rules"
and both positive and negative consequences of
their actions as a definition of their boundaries.
Remind them as a means of letting them know that
they will be kept safe, and will not be allowed
to go out of control. In this manner the highest
possible expectations must be maintained at all
times. But, it is the caregiver's responsibility
to ensure that the individual will actually achieve
these expectations. It is the caregiver's responsibility
to set up interactions with pre-rehearsal so that
the individual will not display random, regressed,
or out of control behavior.
If the individual "tests" and does
not receive consistent, expected limits and boundaries,
they may become "lost" and immediately
regress into out of control actions. For the "unattached"
person who lacks a sense of personal continuity,
unstructured interactions tend to be "out-of-control"
interactions. If they are allowed to go out of
control, "disconnected" individuals
act as though the feeling of being unsafe, unbounded
by expectations traumatizes them.
The interpretation of these actions is that the
individual has no internal consistency from which
to meaningfully organize his/her own behavior.
The interpretation of these actions is that the
individual is experiencing a post-traumatic-stress
like level of arousal, anxiety and panic.
These individuals may feel out of control when
they come up against expectations for appropriate
behavior that are not consistently maintained.
The function of the individual's regressed and
out of control behavior is to have someone take
control over his or her behavior.
These individuals "go out of control seeking
control." This is often the reason why behavior
rapidly escalates to such an extreme, often involving
severe self-injury, extreme language, or extreme
risk to others. For a highly aroused person with
a limited sense of connectedness or continuity,
any external control, no matter how negative,
is less aversive than and preferable to the experience
of being out of control and lost in the VOID.
B. How to break reactive, maladaptive patterns
of adjustment and "set up" a person
for success.
In the short term, the goal is to develop in
the individual a "mechanical" adherence
to "social rules". In the short term,
the goal is to cause the person to become successfully
dependent upon their caregivers to consistently
maintain boundaries and rules. Always being coached
or shown exactly what to do and what is expected
to be successful. When they are unable to do what
is expected, always being supported into a peaceful
and participative response. In the short term,
caregivers must "live the individual's life
for them, with them".
Once the initial dependence on structure and
routines is established, over the long term, the
task is then to attempt to generalize the number
of situations where this control can be successfully
maintained. When "setting up" a person
for success, initially, they may have little sense
of "self" as separate from "other."
They may have no sense of "object permanence".
Temporary aloneness is often experienced as:
"perpetual isolation. As a result the individual
may become severely depressed over the real or
perceived abandonment by significant others and
then enraged at the world (or whoever is handy)
for depriving her of this basic fulfilment."
(Kreisman & Strauss, p. 39).
Note: The individual who has been taught exactly
how to be may be very demanding that everyone
else also follow the same, explicit rules. Besides
the maladaptive behavioral patterns that they
display, their extreme anxiety states can lead
many of these individuals to develop significant
mental health issues. They may obsess on rules
and require that all follow these. Failure to
do so may lead to states of extreme arousal.
Maintaining adequate external control is essential.
The individual is responding in-the-immediate-moment
to cues from their environment. As with a very
young child, in their early years, they are not
responding to an "internalization" of
the rules and expectations. In their early years,
a very young child is not expected to "have
learned his lesson". In early years, a very
young child is not expected to be "independently"
able to follow the rules in the community that
are so well rehearsed within the dependent setting
of their homes.
The goal is to attempt to ritualize the individual's
response to positive verbal cues and expectations,
and to apply these rules equally across environments.
In this way, positive coping habits are established.
For an individual who is dependent on their predictable,
external supports, it is necessary to keep them
feeling safe. Until this is developed the individual
who is otherwise extremely maladjusted should
be kept protected from unpredictable changes in
routines, which he/she consistently finds to be
overwhelming.
Within this context of "error free"
practice, take the initial level of dependent
control that has been established and gradually
transfer this to other caregivers. Maintain a
manageable level of external stimulation. Protect
the individual from becoming over-aroused, which
triggers post-traumatic-stress like reactions
and behavioral regression.
Behavioral training goals are to train in the
maladapted person the same skills that are used
by well-adjusted, mentally healthy persons who
are able to form reciprocal (validated) emotional
attachments. It is necessary for the caregiver
to imagine what the individual would be like with
others if they did have the ability to form attachments.
Model the interactions that show the person how
to be with others. Initially this may be displayed
in a very artificial manner, but at least they
will know that they are "doing the right
thing" and following the successful "social
rules." The goal is to cause the individual
to feel "connected" and validated by
causing the individual to do "connected"
and validated actions with others.
During training, one goal is to coach a person
to "create" places of calm feelings.
Physical methods of blowing out the breath may
help (inhaling afterwards comes naturally). Cognitive
methods of self-distraction and being coached
to have "antidote" thoughts and feelings
may help. Coaching active memories of strength,
power, and accomplishment may help. Engaging in
familiar habits may help.
Initially, these "successfully dependent"
relationships may be artificial, prompted relationships.
The responsibility is with the caregiver for coaching
the individual to "act attached" and
to act "as though" they care about others.
Trough coached practice; the individual will act
enough attachment behaviors that these may eventually
become successful habits. They will eventually
be able to memorize the feeling of being connected
and be able to regulate what they have to do to
obtain this feeling of being connected. They will
be able to respond to these familiar props in
familiar roles and to use these familiar habits.
It is within the context of this type of "mental
health sanctuary" that the individual will
be able to mature, and eventually develop trusting
relationships with others.
Nathan E. Ory, M.A.
Registered Psychologist
Nathan Ory is a psychologist with the Island Mental
Health Support Team, Victoria, B.C.
challengingbehavior@shaw.ca
The
Reality of Severe Autism (pt 1)
The
Reality of Severe Autism (pt 2)
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