How can I tell the difference between normal relationship difficulties, autism-related misunderstandings, and potentially controlling or emotionally harmful behaviour?

I am a 70-year-old autistic man. I received my autism diagnosis in December last year, although my wife first suggested that I might be autistic a couple of years ago. We have been married for ten years and have struggled with aspects of our relationship throughout that time.

Since receiving my diagnosis, I feel that things have become more difficult rather than easier. I am trying to understand whether what I am experiencing is a consequence of autism-related communication differences, whether I am being misunderstood, or whether there may be unhealthy dynamics in our relationship that I do not recognise.

My wife and I have recently agreed to live separately because communication has become such a problem. Neither of us wants the marriage to fail; we both hope that some distance may help us improve things.

One issue that has caused considerable distress concerns my wish to attend a support and social group for autistic adults without learning difficulties. I hoped it would help me meet people with similar experiences and better understand myself. However, my wife reacted very negatively and suggested that my real motivation was to meet other women. She felt that a married man should not want to socialise in a group that might include women.

As a result, I have begun to feel that I cannot comfortably meet new people unless they are already friends or family members. Recently, I became so distressed that I contacted the SHOUT text support service. However, when a helper responded, I found myself unable to continue because the helper was female and I was worried about how that might be perceived.

During the discussion about the autism group, I told my wife that I personally would not object if she wanted to meet socially with other people in a mixed group. Her reaction was one of shock and distress, and I felt as though she interpreted my comment as meaning that I wanted a complete separation, which was not my intention.

At present, I feel confused, isolated and very unhappy. It seems that I do not understand relationships in the same way that my wife does, and I am struggling to know what is reasonable and what is not. I would like guidance on how to navigate relationships as an autistic person diagnosed later in life.

Most of all, I want to be accepted and loved for who I am. At the moment I feel quite hopeless and reluctant to leave the house. I would appreciate any advice, support, or perspective that might help me better understand my situation and find a way forward.

Parents
  • Sometimes when you get a new diagnosis/condition some people want some people to change. Some people will not change and some people need to accept that, than rather try and change some people. I write this I tried to help one of my parents comes to terms with one of my conditions and they just will not. I know you mentioned you have had some problems in the recent past, I don't why that was happening. 

    Do you want things to really change.

  • Hi  . Yes, I can see there will be things about me that my wife will just not get. There are things about her that I just do not understand either. I believe we need the accept those things as being immutable parts of the person and get on with loving each other. I believe it to be part of the way my autistic brain processes things, that I just don't get how one person can "fall in love" with someone as they meet them, later on try to change them and then, when they don't succeed, complain that they wish they had not married them in the first place! There are things about my wife I would like to be different, others that I do not like, but none that I would try to change - she is who she is.

    My point is, I am who I am too.

  • I've met an awful lot of people over the years that meet, fall in love and marry someone, only to try and cram them into a fantasy of what a married couple or people in a relationship should be, then they split up and go an do the whole thing over again.

    I agree with you about acepting people for who they are. I think a lot of people, particularly NT's get this thing in thier heads when a partner gets a diagnosis, of needing to fix them, you are not broken, you do not need fixing.

Reply
  • I've met an awful lot of people over the years that meet, fall in love and marry someone, only to try and cram them into a fantasy of what a married couple or people in a relationship should be, then they split up and go an do the whole thing over again.

    I agree with you about acepting people for who they are. I think a lot of people, particularly NT's get this thing in thier heads when a partner gets a diagnosis, of needing to fix them, you are not broken, you do not need fixing.

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