Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is surely aware of how you are. Someone (why more than one therapist?) trying to put a label on it is not going to change how you are.
Are you seeing these therapists in secret?
Maybe that is the first thing you should talk to your therapist about.
Here's away of how I am, but he hasn't connected it with these disorders that he has such disdain for. ASD presents very differently in women, and those differences allow women to slip through the cracks. I am personally very good at mimicking, which is how I even hid it from my therapist (plural because I got a second opinion). I had to consciously drop all my defenses and act like myself, which is very hard to do. Plus DH see autism as hand flapping and memorizing train timetables, not as the wife who can't wear socks and is rigid with rules.
Anonymous wrote:Your DH is surely aware of how you are. Someone (why more than one therapist?) trying to put a label on it is not going to change how you are.
Are you seeing these therapists in secret?
Maybe that is the first thing you should talk to your therapist about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything you posted above is pretty common. Your title makes it sounds very serious like serious mental illness-- it's not. People w/ ADHD very often have co-morbidity with depression and anxiety, which all can be managed through heathy choices, therapy and/or meds. . You can get therapy to help manage your aspergers symptoms. Maybe your anxiety issues are inflating this to be a much bigger deal than it is. You'll be Ok. Sounds like you're pretty fabulous with all those fancy degrees. ?
I don't think I'm inflating it. When the last shooting attributed to AS happened (can't remember specifically), DH went on a rant about people "like that" needing to be locked up in mental institutions. What would he say if he knew his wife was one of them?
And in case anyone's wondering, women tend to hide AS a lot better than boys and men can, so I'm not stereotypical and not surprised he hasn't caught on.
FYI, there has never been a shooting attributed to autism.
"Calls for medication went unheeded by Nancy Lanza, however, whom the authors described as accommodating to her son's aversion to medication...The report ultimately determines that Lanza's mental health issues may have extended past autism to include anxiety disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder and suicidal disorder...The report says there is "no connection ... between [Lanza's] developmental profile and an increased likelihood of violent actions." And that his "access to assault weapons with high capacity magazines did play a major role."
http://www.cnn.com/2014/11/21/justice/newtown-shooter-adam-lanza-report/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everything you posted above is pretty common. Your title makes it sounds very serious like serious mental illness-- it's not. People w/ ADHD very often have co-morbidity with depression and anxiety, which all can be managed through heathy choices, therapy and/or meds. . You can get therapy to help manage your aspergers symptoms. Maybe your anxiety issues are inflating this to be a much bigger deal than it is. You'll be Ok. Sounds like you're pretty fabulous with all those fancy degrees. ?
I don't think I'm inflating it. When the last shooting attributed to AS happened (can't remember specifically), DH went on a rant about people "like that" needing to be locked up in mental institutions. What would he say if he knew his wife was one of them?
And in case anyone's wondering, women tend to hide AS a lot better than boys and men can, so I'm not stereotypical and not surprised he hasn't caught on.
Anonymous wrote:Um, the problem isn't with you, you know that, right? Your husband sounds like a real piece of work. If knowing yourself better (including getting treatment for commonplace, treatment - amenable conditions) makes your husband lose respect for you, then you should think hard about whether you need him in your life.
Anonymous wrote:
I've been working on the depression alone since our baby was 8 months old, so partly yes, I'd be happy working it on it alone. I think mostly his comments about institutionalizing people with ASD's bothers me more. I'm not violent. I'm a fully functioning member of society. I just struggle in social situations and other, smaller, things (like figuring out makeup).
And I really wish he didn't consider depression a character flaw. PPD nearly destroyed me, in no small part because I didn't have the support from family and friends and yes, my husband, that I should. He still claims lack of social support doesn't contribute to PPD.
Anonymous wrote:The cluster of conditions you described can be managed if you are aware. Whether you have the exact label is less important than working with the right therapist(s) on the right things.
A separate issue is your DH's attitude toward mental illness. People can be quite prejudiced and maybe he doesn't need the label (even if you do). Whether you are formally diagnosed, the bigger questions are how supportive is he when appropriate?
Anonymous wrote:Your husband does not sound very perceptive. What is his disorder? How can anyone possibly love with someone on the spectrum, with ADHD, Anxiety and depression? Those are pretty serious mental problems. Are you sure he does not already know? Aside from the Aspergers the other 3 are easy to spot a mile away and make maintaining relationships quite difficult.