Anonymous wrote:You married poorly.
Anonymous wrote:I have a relative like this but didn't know about autism when I was younger. I wish I had understood more that it wasn't rejection. I took it really personally and felt ignored. Has your family done any learning about autism together?
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. How did you date, marry, and live with this man without knowing that he doesn't like to talk at dinner time/in the car/etc.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. How did you date, marry, and live with this man without knowing that he doesn't like to talk at dinner time/in the car/etc.?
NP:
People are always asking this- about this post and most others “why did you marry him” “did you not notice” etc.
Most people are able to mask fairly well, and keep it up for years. How else would some of these people ever find someone to marry?? But they can’t keep up the 24/7 “company behavior” for the rest of their lives….so when they get very comfortable, the mask comes off. That said, there are usually red flags earlier on, if they are not missed….
Anonymous wrote:Get your affairs in order and divorce. It’s your only option.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand. How did you date, marry, and live with this man without knowing that he doesn't like to talk at dinner time/in the car/etc.?
Anonymous wrote:Participating in small talk is masking for him. He doesn’t feel a need to mask for his family. Frankly, I get it, to a point. Maybe there is some compromise. It sounds silly, but when my daughter doesn’t want to talk at the dinner table, we make it more structured and do rose, bud, thorn: What was the best thing of the day, what are you looking forward to in the future, and what was the worst thing of the day?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a teacher and honestly I notice a lot of kids just need time to sit and eat quietly. They don’t view as socializing time. Adults are the same. You’ll have trouble op unless you focus on his interests and build bridges.
Anonymous wrote:With a diagnosis of HFA, he’s not likely to change. The primary challenge is social communication. The experience you had growing up isn’t relevant, because it doesn’t sound like your family members had autism.