Anonymous wrote:People often use this term to both extract sympathy and excuse bad behavior.
Whatever he is doing will get worse, not better, with marriage. Do you want this man raising your children? Proceed with extreme caution.
Anonymous wrote:My bigger concern would be that parenting young kids is extremely stressful and it requires a LOT of pretending to be okay when you are tired, annoyed, overstimulated, etc. And sometimes pretending not to hate your spouse when in the moment, you want them to sit on a porcupine. And committing to not bean counting at least in the short and medium term. You do the pretending because you can see past the immediate discomfort, injustice and rage and you still believe in the long term vision.
If someone can’t do that, they might be a wonderful person and a good partner, but I think coparent will be difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Uh...a$$hole is not in the DSM but neither is neurodivergent per se.
He is misapplying and ballooning whatever diagnosis he does have to make excuses for rude behavior.
People don't get to be rude just because they're autistic. Bottom line.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend is diagnosed neurodivergent. I love him a bunch. He is insanely smart and we have a lot in common.
His neurodivergence causes him to be super blunt all the time. He is very direct in expressing this he doesn’t like about me, though I know overall he loves me deeply.
We are talking marriage and I feel reluctant to marry someone who may complain about my traits regularly. Anyone have experience
With this?
Never heard of this with ND people.
They usually mainly focus on their personal needs and hyperfocus, and don’t notice what’s going on elsewhere or with someone else.
Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend is diagnosed neurodivergent. I love him a bunch. He is insanely smart and we have a lot in common.
His neurodivergence causes him to be super blunt all the time. He is very direct in expressing this he doesn’t like about me, though I know overall he loves me deeply.
We are talking marriage and I feel reluctant to marry someone who may complain about my traits regularly. Anyone have experience
With this?
Anonymous wrote:Do not do this.
Your children may inherit his neurodivergence. Then you will be parenting ND children while he is at best tuned out and possibly is emotionally abusive to them.
Anonymous wrote:My boyfriend is diagnosed neurodivergent. I love him a bunch. He is insanely smart and we have a lot in common.
His neurodivergence causes him to be super blunt all the time. He is very direct in expressing this he doesn’t like about me, though I know overall he loves me deeply.
We are talking marriage and I feel reluctant to marry someone who may complain about my traits regularly. Anyone have experience
With this?
Anonymous wrote:No one is diagnosed "neurodivergent." It's not a diagnosis.
At any rate, get the heck away from him. You should be more than reluctant to marry anyone who complains about your "traits" at all, let alone "regularly."