Strongly suspect partner has Aspergers

Hi, I am new and am looking for advice, reassurance and support.  I strongly suspect my partner of the past 5 years has Aspergers.  Here is a bit about my situation:-

I am a 46 year old mum of 3 almost grown up children, I divorced 6 years ago after 18 years of marriage.  five years ago I met my current partner Davey, a 49 year old fireman.  I love him very much but he has tested my very being to the core, and in desperation, I typed some of his "traits" into google and I am fairly certain he has Aspergers.  This has been so hard for me to deal with as I am a very loving and communicative person and at times until I realised that Davey possibly has this condition, I have felt that I have been going mad.

Davey finds it very hard to show his emotions and he cannot seem to emphathise with people.  He has some OCD traits (neatness, lining things up etc), he has a very over sensitive sense of smell and even when relaxing, his leg has to move at all times, I think this is called stimming?  

Davey has never married or had children.  When we met he was sharing his home with a former partner, they had split up after 18 months together but had never got around to actually splitting up!  She just went into the spare room and stayed there for the next 15 years until I came along!  She had problems with depression and coupled with his condition, they just stayed in limbo like this.  He told me he knows he should have asked her to leave but because they both had "issues" this never happend.  He instead, just threw himself into renovating his house and garden and his passion which is anything to do with cars - mainly classic ones.  As well as being his passion, cars are also his obessession, driving them, watching F1, renovating them, visiting car shows etc etc 

Long story short, we got together, and obviously I wasn't happy that he lived with his ex so with my help, he found her alternative accommodation, and she moved out, he sold up and moved in with me, which is where we find ourselves today.  

During my relationship with Davey the only way I can describe it is that it constantly feels like trying to "fit a round peg into a square hole".  

Some aspects of our relationship are a joy, he is very tidy and neat, and because I am a fairly houseproud type of person, this is great, especially compared to my untidy ex husband!  However, other aspects, mainly due to the fact that I am a loving and fairly romantic person, I find very difficult to deal with.

Davey cannot ever say he loves me.  He is not bothered about sex at all, happy if we have it or happy if we don't.  There is no tenderness or intimacy in our relationship.  Warning signs did occur when he told me that his relationship with his ex stopped being sexual 18 months into their relationship when she moved into the spare room.  They then lived alongside each other for the next 15 years with no physical contact at all, and during that time, Davey never had any other sexual relationships.  

It isn't so much the lack of sex, it is the lack of tenderness and romance.  Don't get me wrong I don't want hearts and flowers all the time, but it would be nice ocassionally to be told that I am loved and to feel desired.  Unfortunately, all this is made worse for me, as my ex husband was very loving, tactile and romantic!  Davey doesn't like to hold hands, and if I stroke his arm or caress him, he pulls away, telling me he doesn't like it.  

Until recently, Davey's behaviour hurt me greatly, it was only when I thought perhaps he had Aspergers that I realised it isn't me that is at fault.  However, my self esteem has been on the floor at times over his behaviours.  I know he doesn't like "fat women" - he told me this when we first met, so I diet all the time, so I don't get fat, obsessing at times, almost to the point of an eating disorder.  I know he likes the house tidy, so I go to work then come home and sometimes do housework until I am on the point of exhaustion to make him happy.  I constantly try to make him happy but I get nothing back.  If I ask him, do you love me, his reply is "I am here aren't I"!  

Before, I met Davey, I was strong and confident, vivacious and optomistic, I now feel that as a result of his ways, I am no longer any of those things, I feel he has sapped me of the person I was.  Yet, I know I love him and I don't want to leave him.  I just need to know how to deal with him, and wish I could find someone to talk to who is also in this situation.

The incident that has lead me to write all this on here, is that the other night I was upset over something, crying and feeling very low, and I needed a hug, comfort, and I had to ask him to hug me, and he said he couldn't as he was feeling ill himself (he is getting over the flu), he said his body was too achey for him to turn over in the bed and hug me, instead he gave me a little pat!!!  At this point the light on our relationship went out for me and I am seriously despite my love for him, asking him to move out, I feel he is compromising my sanity the longer he stays.  In short, I feel in total turmoil.  Please if you can, give me some advice ......

Parents
  • Hi Samjasliv and everyone who has replied on this thread.

    I am also new here and in a very similar situation to you. I have been with my partner for nearly 12 years, but we have a child together who has recently been given a statement of SEN and is thought to be on the AS. We await an official diagnosis.

    It was only when our son got into the system and I began to research, that I realised that his father has it too.

    Honestly, your post rang so many bells for me that I almost fell off my seat! Then I read DaisyGirl's God Complex paragraph and my eyes popped, as that is my partner to a tee.

    Its very, very difficult. He is in denial and he too does not reply when you try to communicate with him on anything other than a superficial level. When you up the ante he becomes hostile and he can be vile.

    He has said, done and perhaps most importantly, not done so many very damaging things during the course of our relationship that I am hanging onto it by a thread and I do not know where to turn. His relationship history is amazingly similar to Davey.

    I've also posted on the carers thread. I'll be back when I have slightly composed myself, but its brought everything to the surface that I have been keeping submerged for so long. I have not been able to cope with my little son's needs and tackle this too. He has completely ignored our son's problems and given no support, only attending meetings if asked and then not speaking.

    You are not alone. From Rosemary 

     

     

Reply
  • Hi Samjasliv and everyone who has replied on this thread.

    I am also new here and in a very similar situation to you. I have been with my partner for nearly 12 years, but we have a child together who has recently been given a statement of SEN and is thought to be on the AS. We await an official diagnosis.

    It was only when our son got into the system and I began to research, that I realised that his father has it too.

    Honestly, your post rang so many bells for me that I almost fell off my seat! Then I read DaisyGirl's God Complex paragraph and my eyes popped, as that is my partner to a tee.

    Its very, very difficult. He is in denial and he too does not reply when you try to communicate with him on anything other than a superficial level. When you up the ante he becomes hostile and he can be vile.

    He has said, done and perhaps most importantly, not done so many very damaging things during the course of our relationship that I am hanging onto it by a thread and I do not know where to turn. His relationship history is amazingly similar to Davey.

    I've also posted on the carers thread. I'll be back when I have slightly composed myself, but its brought everything to the surface that I have been keeping submerged for so long. I have not been able to cope with my little son's needs and tackle this too. He has completely ignored our son's problems and given no support, only attending meetings if asked and then not speaking.

    You are not alone. From Rosemary 

     

     

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