Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband comes from a family of Asperger's people. He is socially clueless, but since he is introverted and doesn't say much, it doesn't actually show until you get to know him.
I have had to sit him down and really explain it to him. Every year. Break down each interaction into manageable steps and tell him exactly what words he could have said or what gesture, etc, he could have done which would have made it better.
It could be your spouse has ADHD, not Aspie tendencies - if he has no filter and is impulsive, it will get worse with age, so he needs to know and perhaps, if there are other symptoms you don't alike, he could be medicated for it (such as tardiness, hyperactivity, clumsiness, difficulty organizing and managing long projects).
You don't have a husband. You have a mentally challenged child you babysit.
Except that he has an MD and a PhD and may find a cure for the cancer you or a loved one will develop later in life!
Broaden your horizons, PPs who responded to my post. It takes all kinds of people to make this world go round.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband comes from a family of Asperger's people. He is socially clueless, but since he is introverted and doesn't say much, it doesn't actually show until you get to know him.
I have had to sit him down and really explain it to him. Every year. Break down each interaction into manageable steps and tell him exactly what words he could have said or what gesture, etc, he could have done which would have made it better.
It could be your spouse has ADHD, not Aspie tendencies - if he has no filter and is impulsive, it will get worse with age, so he needs to know and perhaps, if there are other symptoms you don't alike, he could be medicated for it (such as tardiness, hyperactivity, clumsiness, difficulty organizing and managing long projects).
You don't have a husband. You have a mentally challenged child you babysit.
Anonymous wrote:My husband comes from a family of Asperger's people. He is socially clueless, but since he is introverted and doesn't say much, it doesn't actually show until you get to know him.
I have had to sit him down and really explain it to him. Every year. Break down each interaction into manageable steps and tell him exactly what words he could have said or what gesture, etc, he could have done which would have made it better.
It could be your spouse has ADHD, not Aspie tendencies - if he has no filter and is impulsive, it will get worse with age, so he needs to know and perhaps, if there are other symptoms you don't alike, he could be medicated for it (such as tardiness, hyperactivity, clumsiness, difficulty organizing and managing long projects).
Anonymous wrote:My husband comes from a family of Asperger's people. He is socially clueless, but since he is introverted and doesn't say much, it doesn't actually show until you get to know him.
I have had to sit him down and really explain it to him. Every year. Break down each interaction into manageable steps and tell him exactly what words he could have said or what gesture, etc, he could have done which would have made it better.
It could be your spouse has ADHD, not Aspie tendencies - if he has no filter and is impulsive, it will get worse with age, so he needs to know and perhaps, if there are other symptoms you don't alike, he could be medicated for it (such as tardiness, hyperactivity, clumsiness, difficulty organizing and managing long projects).