Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Asperger marriage"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]This has been a real eye-opening thread. I’ve been with DH for 25 years. Lots of conflict over: Took risks with the kids when they were young Inability to stick to routines or actually parent them Zero help with social life mgt for us or kids Zero help with anything related to the kids like extracurriculars unless related to his personal interest Rudeness in restaurants/public Inappropriate comments in social settings, actually everywhere Zero executive functioning ability Hates change, refused to move for years despite kids being in poor schools Zero ability to connect with kids beyond teasing or his one sport of interest Never shows empathy to me and any situation I’m in that could be painful Drinks daily to handle high anxiety Was insanely hyperactive and hyper sexual until his early 50s (no affairs, but expected sex daily) Cannot engage in anything but superficial convos Never remembers bdays, special occasions etc. In arguments with me, appears to only hear 20% of what I say, nitpicks that 20%, never affirms my experiences Can be incredibly bossy/overbearing, never picks up on social cues I thought all of these traits were ADHD (one of our children is diagnosed ADHD) although he was never diagnosed as a child. He has never been emotionally abusive, does not have tantrums as described in this thread. But, I’ve felt like a single parent since day 1 and the loneliness of not being with someone who can emotionally connect with me is breaking me apart. [/quote] [b] This is exactly why this thread is damaging. Please, please, please educate yourself about these conditions (not on DCUM) and speak to a medical professional before concluding your spouse has a specific disorder. It’s embarrassing to you and dehumanizing to those with autism[/b]. [/quote] To the poster who is offended whenever anyone suggests autism and being abusive are related... it clearly strikes a nerve and I'm sorry about that. I agree, there are many people with autism out there who are kind, compassionate, pleasant people who don't have an abusive bone in their body. [b]However, they are not who these threads are about. [/b] Some of the traits that go along with autism (and ADHD, which is highly co-morbid) do make it more likely for an individual to become abusive, and there is a subset (maybe a very small one) of autistic people for whom this plays out. It's tough for us living with a partner like this, and leaving would be much more complicated than leaving a "traditional" abusive situation. I find posts like this helpful and somewhat therapeutic. I get good advice, feel that the other posters understand me to a T, and feel less alone. We all paint the exact same picture, and there is a lot of research out there to back it up (and I have done my research, not to blame my DH, but to learn more about my special needs child). Please don't deny my (or other's) reality. I am not denying yours, just saying mine is different than yours. [/quote] Unfortunately the same label is being used for both extremes. Imagine if a racial term was used To describe SOME of the people in the group, and the defense was, “sorry, we only mean SOME of those people. Stop being easily offended by the stereotypes being presented.” I mean, in this society, we should KNOW how harmful that line of argument is. [/quote] Translation: Abuse victims should shut up because I don't like to hear their realities.[/quote] No. Abuse victims should be careful not to abuse a vulnerable group- which is statistically more like to be abused than neurotypical people-while telling their realities.[/quote] That's some serious gaslighting. Abuse victims, ignore this poster. [/quote] I think you don’t understand what gaslighting means. No one is denying the abuse they suffered, or saying they are crazy because they suffered it. Instead, the argument is don’t stereotype and drag down a disabled group of people. The qualities listed above are not part of the dsm description of asd persons (though it might describe a particular asd person) and neurotypical people can also share these faults. So shout your story from the rooftops. But if you loop in the whole asd population with it, than you are doing something wrong. [/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics