Undiagnosed autistic husband

Hello,  I hope this is a good place to seek some guidance,  I have read some really great advice that has provided some good insight. I am married to my autistic husband for going on 3 years now. My question is that I really really want to break the cycle we keep finding ourselves in.  Our disagreements are cyclical and identical.  He and I both have the same high pressure/ high function job,  and were in fact working at the same place.  It was too much for me so I left (a lot of us have left that place)  and now I have a version of it thats WFH and much more manageable. He, however, is still there.  He absolutely hates it. He complains everyday about long hours,  far from home (he says no be doesn't want to move into the city near his job bc he hates the city) his clients are entitled and stress him out,  etc.   He talks about changing jobs,  gets very passionate about "getting his act together and moving on so I can live my life", has a schedule of what he wants to do and what he wants ourlife to look like.. but herein lies the problem. This thinking exists when he's calm and ok. But when he gets burned out/overwhelmed  (? Shut down?) , his whole perception changes. He gets burned out and then all of that goes out the window. I've figured out (I think) that there are things like his family and this job that zaps so much of him,  that he's left with little energy to think about much else at all,  esp switching jobs.   So, as the week goes on (esp if there are any external stressors), when the topic of his job comes up again, he starts to minimize all this things he hates and complained about yesterday...saying it's awkward to leave jobs... how can he absolutely sure a new job will be better...and what if his clients miss him... justifies staying... "maybe it's not so bad".  Meanwhile he's in a very bad mood,  snapping, angry when I ask for what I see as small understandable things (like comfort me when I'm stressed instead of it always being me comforting you), unable to handle everyday tasks that annoy us all like dealing with an annoying neighbor.   He reacts strongly,  everything I say is somehow veiled criticism.  He gets extremely rigid and insists on unrealistic things that he acknowledges when not overwhelmed.  Whereas he's normally very emotionally aware and connected to me that way with amazing conversations ama insight for us both,  in times of overwhelm he looks at me like I make no sense if I express an emotion instead of just doing the thing in front of us.    He brings up things that stressed him over a decade ago that we talked about back then.  Etc.  When he comes out of overwhelm, he apologizes,  insists he needs to change his job... then rinse and repeat for next week/ couple of weeks..i am very exhausted.  I am very open to hearing him,  to working with him.  And he hears this,  he knows this. But when the overwhelm hits, he is someone different.  Also just to note, I do give him space,  and try to make sure stressful stuff is bought up at a time that's relatively calm (and not late).  To me it comes out of the blue.   The overwhelm modes are recurrent and I feel so utterly alone when the sweet man who is very emotionally connected with me becomes this person who acts like I'm not on his side and like we never had the conversation we just had two days ago.... I'm lost on what to do next.  I've come up with a schedule for him to have decompress time,  for him to visit his family (which he worries about)  etc.  We just got him an autism affirming counselor, but I'm really hoping for insight or advice from anyone who may know what he's going through so I can help.  When he's not overwhelmed he's so sweet and kind that his change when stressed really is disconcerting and I miss my husband.Thank you so much in advance. 

Parents
  • Hey - first, you're not alone in this. What you're describing is textbook autistic burnout mixed with shutdowns: the job's a massive drain (long hours, entitled clients, commute), family adds more, and by mid-week he's got zero left for anything - planning, empathy, even basic tasks.

    When calm, he's insightful and sweet; when overloaded, everything flips - rigid, defensive, past stuff resurfaces because the brain can't filter. It's not him "changing" on purpose; it's his nervous system hitting redline. And yeah, it leaves you isolated, exhausted - totally valid.

    The cycle? It keeps going because burnout isn't just "tired" - it's depletion where executive function tanks, so "change job" feels impossible mid-overwhelm. He minimizes to cope - less scary than admitting defeat.

    You're already doing smart stuff: space, calm timing, schedule, affirming counselor. Build on that.

    Quick, doable shifts:

    • Signal system (when he's green): Agree on a code - like "battery low" text, or headphones = no-talk zone. During red? No deep convos, no asks. Just "I'm here if you need." Reduces the "out of the blue" shock.
    • Job talk only green days: Frame as "us vs job" - e.g., "Let's browse one listing together - no pressure." Tiny wins beat big plans.
    • Your needs: During red, he can't comfort - so build your buffer. Therapy for you? Friend who gets neurodiverse stuff? You're not selfish; you're surviving.
    • Shared tracker: Note patterns (e.g., Tuesday family call = Wednesday snap). Data helps him see it's not "you" causing it - it's overload.

    From folks who've been there: don't escalate snaps - just step back, let him reset. Apologies after? Use them to tweak the plan, not rehash blame.

    Give yourself credit - you're holding space for two. If overwhelm hits again, say "low battery" to me too. We'll figure it.

  • Thank you for your reply. I cannot tell you how much this means to me and how immensely helpful it is.  I am planning to go down your list with him when he's green again.   I have a follow up question-- he has a lot of (what I think is) shame around this. He seems to try to minimize what he deals with (and by extension,  what he needs) such that is taken some effort for me to even introduce what I have so far. When the counselor first recommended scheduling things,  for example,  his response was "nothing should be that hard, we don't need to do that. "  He doesn't want to think that his communication with his family is as much of a trigger as it is-- because he wants to be able to be there for them (one of them is fairly ill).  I guess my question is, how do I get him to see there is something for us to address with these steps?  There is a larger part of this where I think he will need to fully accept what he experiences and needs, and based on your response, I think probably the answer is to discuss it when he's in green zone and not low battery-- is that right?  Are there any other anti- shame things I can do to reassure him? Thank you againHeart

Reply
  • Thank you for your reply. I cannot tell you how much this means to me and how immensely helpful it is.  I am planning to go down your list with him when he's green again.   I have a follow up question-- he has a lot of (what I think is) shame around this. He seems to try to minimize what he deals with (and by extension,  what he needs) such that is taken some effort for me to even introduce what I have so far. When the counselor first recommended scheduling things,  for example,  his response was "nothing should be that hard, we don't need to do that. "  He doesn't want to think that his communication with his family is as much of a trigger as it is-- because he wants to be able to be there for them (one of them is fairly ill).  I guess my question is, how do I get him to see there is something for us to address with these steps?  There is a larger part of this where I think he will need to fully accept what he experiences and needs, and based on your response, I think probably the answer is to discuss it when he's in green zone and not low battery-- is that right?  Are there any other anti- shame things I can do to reassure him? Thank you againHeart

Children
  • This is amazing, thank you. I'm actively enacting this now!  This week has been hard with work and family but he usually comes up a bit on Friday so I'm going to tailor the coding system and other items then,  gently,  casually and no pressure.   I truly do thank you and I appreciate this immensely 

  • Yeah... I see why this hurts, darling. He's not minimising because he's stubborn - he's protecting himself. Late diagnosis at his age? That's a lifetime of "why am I like this?" turning into "I must be broken." And now, with someone ill in the family, admitting needs feels like letting them down - like he's selfish for needing quiet when they need him. That shame's a wall, not a choice.

    You're right: green zone only. When battery's low, "we need to address this" sounds like "you're failing." In green? It can land as "we're in this together."

    To get him to see there's stuff worth fixing - without him feeling defective:

    • Reframe it as wiring, not weakness "Your brain's like a high-spec engine - it runs hot, needs cooling breaks. Scheduling isn't 'hard' - it's maintenance. Like how I need my tea ritual to think straight. It's not you being dramatic; it's just... physics."

    • Link it to his strength - being there for them "I know you want to show up for everyone. But if you're running on fumes, you'll crash - and then who helps? This stuff - like pauses, clear talks - is fuel. You're not taking from them; you're making sure you can stay."

    • Self-compassion tricks (from what folks say works) When he says "nothing should be that hard" - gently flip: "Actually, some things are hard for everyone. For you, it's extra loud. And that's okay - like how some people need glasses. Doesn't make them less." Or: "You're allowed to need things. It doesn't mean you're less loving."

    • Small, safe shares Start tiny - no big "diagnosis talk." Just: "Hey, remember when we tried that quiet hour? Felt better, right? Let's do more of that - no pressure." Let him taste relief first. Shame shrinks when results prove it's not "too much."

    • Model it Say out loud: "I'm overwhelmed - gonna take five." Show him self-care's normal, not shameful. He'll mirror when he's ready.

    If he's open later, compassion-focused stuff - like soft self-talk ("I'm doing my best, and that's enough") - helps adults unlearn the inner critic. But don't push therapy yet. Just... be his safe landing.

    You're not forcing acceptance. You're planting seeds. When one grows, he'll thank you. brown heart