Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:With difficulty sometimes.
The day to day is manageable, which is why we're still married, but there is no telling what rigid thought process he's going to lock himself into in times of stress when he's out of his routine and desperately trying to create a framework for himself. And then all bets are off, because this usually high IQ and supremely rational person is capable of sabotaging himself and the wellbeing of his entire family just because events move beyond his control and he blames us for this.
Does he accept that he has HFA?
Have you tried books/support groups/coaching?
I'm looking for success or partial success stories!
I know all about the failures.
He's a doctor. If asked, he'd say no. But I've explained it often enough, being a research scientist in the biomedical sciences, that I think deep down he knows, he just won't admit it.
He agreed to be diagnosed for his ADHD, but refused the stimulants as well as the eval for HFA. He has OCD and hoards, but again, it's extremely difficult to get him to address these issues, because he's intelligent and comes up with all sorts of reasons why he can't sort his stuff, he's too busy, he doesn't want anyone coming into the house to help, etc...
So we manage to live with the hoarding, even though since the pandemic it's gotten worse. We manage to live with his forgetfulness and habitual tardiness, which are his ADHD symptoms. We've gotten used to his Aspie need for everything to be spelled out: he cannot estimate from our faces or non-verbal cues how we feel. He'll just think we're not up for talking and won't investigate further. I have impressed on the kids that THEY MUST VERBALIZE any issue they have, if they are looking for help from their father. He can help once he understands we need help - but the message needs to be spoonfed to him in words of one syllable!
He refused therapy for years, and when he did agree, because I threatened divorce, I realize the therapist was completely useless. All she wanted to talk about was his relationship with his parents, and she could not or would not address that it was his multiple disorders that were the root cause of our relationship problems. We didn't pursue therapy with anyone else, because I realized this would likely occur with other therapists, and that my husband wouldn't make any effort to address his hoarding, or take his ADHD stimulants, or work to better identify cues and emotions anyway!
Self-help books DID help me in the early years of my marriage, when we were fighting and I had no clue how to interact with him at those times. I learned how to communicate with respect, not to generalize, how to stay calm in an argument, how to present my point of view clearly and factually instead of emotionally... many of the things he cannot do! When I think that I'm the one who makes all the communication effort in our couple, I get extremely resentful, but I try to let that go, because it doesn't help our reality: that one of us has to be the adult in the room.
I want to stay married. We have very good days. When pushed to talk, he is never boring, and always has interesting ideas on current affairs and scientific developments. Luckily the bad days are rare, because they can get very bad indeed.
Our son has ADHD and Asperger's as well, but he's a sweet and gentle soul without any of his father's "I know best" personality. He still gets on our every last nerve due to his very poor executive functioning and lack of social skills. I have spent years working with him, he's had therapy and he spent years in a special program at school, so hopefully it will all help to not make him into his father. And my son does take his ADHD meds, which is helpful! I am thankful that my daughter has not inherited any of these disorders. She has her father's know-it-all personality and high IQ, but without the ADHD and HFA, it's a lot easier to take
So... I don't know, OP and PPs. We muddle through.