Anonymous wrote:Yeah it ain’t autism. I am as autistic as is my DD. We love to info dump, but ask before doing so, & are aware if someone is not interested (rejection sensitivity).
This sounds like just man being man, everyone else be damned. Kind of annoying, honestly. I’d talk with him away from the table & let him know that sometimes you all need a second occasionally to get salt, salad dressing, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH doesn't do this regularly, but I've been in the situation a few times with him and other various people.
I speak up in the moment - "sorry, excuse me. I want to hear the rest of this, but we need a quick break for refills. Could we pause for a minute?"
Do that often enough, and he may learn to adjust to taking breaks in his stories.
Except sometimes you don’t want to hear the long story but weren’t given a choice. What then. I call it holding court. Some people can just blather on forever.
This is very kind & polite. Love it!
Anonymous wrote:Yeah it ain’t autism. I am as autistic as is my DD. We love to info dump, but ask before doing so, & are aware if someone is not interested (rejection sensitivity).
This sounds like just man being man, everyone else be damned. Kind of annoying, honestly. I’d talk with him away from the table & let him know that sometimes you all need a second occasionally to get salt, salad dressing, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my husband - either when I’m captive (long car ride, dinner, sitting in my office) or when I’m in the middle of something else. He gets pissy if he’s interrupted, even if there’s an urgent matter, but has no problem interrupting other people.
It’s not autism - it’s being a selfish jerk. You know how I know? He doesn’t do it with people outside the family.
My dad does the long lectures and its not autism, its self centered. If the word hadn’t been thrown around all the time, I’d say it was a narcissist trait.
But my dad does do it to people outside the family!
Anonymous wrote:Tell him to let everyone know to get what they need before he starts.
Anonymous wrote:This is my husband - either when I’m captive (long car ride, dinner, sitting in my office) or when I’m in the middle of something else. He gets pissy if he’s interrupted, even if there’s an urgent matter, but has no problem interrupting other people.
It’s not autism - it’s being a selfish jerk. You know how I know? He doesn’t do it with people outside the family.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. This is OP. I was sure I was going to be excoriated for being rude. I’ll get up and start serving seconds, quietly, while DH tells story and he gets SO upset. I’m so glad to know that I’m not alone. We are not trying to be rude but we are all capable of quietly asking for more milk and also continuing to listen.
Anonymous wrote:The moment I realized that my DH is autistic was just now while reading through this thread.
Anonymous wrote:I think in the moment if you see people getting restless, you HAVE to say, “hon, can we get the Cliffs Notes version, please?” It is simply rude to everyone else not to get him to wrap it up quickly. He is incredibly socially clueless and I can’t believe it’s not affecting his relationships. I don’t invite bores like this to social events.