Anonymous wrote:Ladies lets please keep this discussion from devolving into anti-autism invective.
I think a lot of the challenge when a partner is diagnosed too is the communication mismatch. It’s hard likely for BOTH the ND and NT spouses. neurodiversity should and can be a positive thing but when you’re living and breathing with differences in your family it can just simply be hard sometimes. I think it’s fair to have feelings around it (feelings never actually hurt anyone, right?) and to be able to find a community who may get it can be a relief. The issue comes when you demand change from the people who are different as opposed to empathy.
My child was diagnosed and then my partner self-diagnosed. It was a big revelation for all. I was grieving but then it helped put the pieces together for me as to why I was frustrated so often with my partner, and realized most of it was specifically around their rigidity, black and white thinking, and frankly their low threshold for burnout. But after realizing their autistic traits, it eventually helped me understand their perspective during hard moments. Like them way over-reacting when I interrupted their train of tonight when talking about something they cared a lot about. Pathologizing this would sound like cutting them off when they were info dumping about a special interest, but it just made me more aware of things that meant a lot to them and why they might respond the way they do. Reminding myself of the NT/ND communication mismatch helps and just being as open as possible to understanding why they are the way they are and asking for them to try and do the same for you.