Help for partners of autistic people

I find very little help or advice for partners of autistic people.

Wherever I look, the consensus seems to be to take it all on the chin.
Even when undergoing specialised counselling with my wife, I felt like there was little empathy, space or consideration for what I was going through, as if the difficulties and pain were only being experienced by my wife and I was a mere witness to it all.

Our situation is extremely complicated. Too long to give any meaningful explanation here that wouldn't miss vital information but I'll try my best.

We've been together for almost 9 years and she was only diagnosed over a year ago. When we first met, she was going through a very hard time and it was through our relationship that she discovered she had PTSD. I stood by her side through long and thin. Her PTSD was related to a sexual attack, this had a deep impact in our sexual relationship in more ways that I can explain meaningfully. We went through specialised couples counselling, which did partially help, but we never managed to have a normal sexual life.

All this had a very profound impact on me, one that never appears to be acknowledged from her side and while  painful, it is also problematic as it is hard to discuss certain things in a meaningful manner.

For many years, we planned to buy land and self-build our own eco-home. As soon as we actually embarked on our project, all hell broke loose. Basically, the change of environment and the realisation from her side of what the project actually entailed had a deep impact on her, which severely affected our project and our relationship. I became overloaded with responsibilities and over-worked. After a few months, she got a diagnostic for autism. While this gave us an insight on what was actually going on, in a way it made things worse.

I've been doing a lot of research, and I'm very aware of the kind of impact that a late diagnosis can have. We sought specialised couples counselling, which we attended for a few months. While it did give us some tools to negotiate our problems, it didn't magically fix anything and I felt unheard in the whole thing.

Suddenly, I was in a situation in which her needs, wants and decisions changed on a daily, if not hourly basis, often in circular fashion, creating a groundhog-day -like experience. On top of this, I was often being blamed for everything that was happening and accused of saying things I'd never said. We would often reach an agreement on something, only to be overturned the following morning with her stating that she had been masking.

Basic decisions related to the project became impossible, endless discussions to nowhere. Rationality completely disappeared from any conversation, the subject shifting endlessly and conflicting, opposing opinions being presented as one from her side. I started to lose my mind as from one day to the next, entire narratives changed as if the previous one had never existed. At that point all I wanted was an impartial witness to assess who was telling the truth and where consensual reality was.

While all these episodes were going on, it soon became clear that they were autistic meltdowns. When we started identifying this, I often tried to end the discussions when they happened, as we were advised to do by our counsellor. This was not only almost impossible, it was soul destroying. She wouldn't let go of anything, however I phrased things, however hard I tried, however much I cited our counsellor's advice. All along, the discussions got more heated, with her often saying extremely offensive things and me losing my temper out of sheer frustration, feeling trapped and completely incapable of dealing with the situation, often feeling deeply hurt by her words.

Often, the morning-after was full of apologies and reconciliation, saying that it was all down to a meltdown, but these reconciliations were often presented further down-the-line as masking. These sequences of events made me question everything. I no longer trust that she's telling the truth or that I ever know what she really thinks about anything.

During this time, her confidence and abilities appeared to drop at a worrying speed. From being a capable, self-reliant person, she became unable to do almost anything on her own. She needed and sought my attention, constantly, to undertake any task. At this point, demand avoidance also became apparent. Now I was trapped in a situation in which I was constantly being asked about how to do anything, yet instantly, my advice was ignored, or the start of another pointless, meandering argument to nowhere, culminating in a meltdown.

There's a whole lot more to this story, but I guess it paints a picture.

We're now in a situation in which breaking up appears to be the only reasonable outcome for both of us, yet I feel an insane amount of pain regarding this. I love her dearly and wish I knew how to handle this situation but, however hard I've tried, I find no real support or advice for partners dealing with situations like this. As I've pointed out above, although impossible, I feel like having an impartial witness present would help. At least with establishing a base for consensual reality, as without it, it's just someone's word against another and I'm losing my mind.

Parents
  • You're not losing your mind - you're just exhausted from carrying something that's too heavy for one person.

    What you're describing - those endless loops, the shifting truths, the blame, the meltdowns, the sudden dependence - it's not "just" autism, or PTSD, or a project gone wrong. It's a collision. And you're the one left holding the pieces while everyone else talks about her needs.

    The thing is, late-diagnosis autism in adults can flip everything. Masking drops, demand avoidance spikes, meltdowns become daily... and partners like you? You're suddenly the therapist, the fixer, the scapegoat - all without training or backup. No wonder you feel unheard. Because in most support spaces - couples counselling, forums, even books - it's all about "accommodating" the autistic person. You're told to stay calm, to de-escalate, to "understand." But no one says: what about you? What about the grief when intimacy vanishes? When trust erodes? When you can't even decide what colour the walls should be without it turning into Armageddon?

    You're right - there is almost no real advice for partners in this spot. The NAS forums, Reddit, even the books like "The Journal of Best Practices" or "Loving Someone with Asperger's"... they skim the surface. They say "patience" and "boundaries," but they don't talk about how soul-crushing it is when the apologies get rewritten as "masking" later. Or how you're left questioning your own sanity because reality keeps rewriting itself.

    So here's what I think: you're not wrong to want an impartial witness. Not because you're "crazy," but because consensual reality is real. And when one person's brain rewires mid-conversation - without warning - you need someone neutral to say, "Yeah, that happened. You didn't imagine it."

    If you're serious about staying...

    • Get a separate therapist. Just for you. Not couples - you. Someone who gets neurodiversity but won't gaslight your pain.
    • Document. Quietly. Dates, what was said, what shifted. Not to "prove" anything - just to anchor yourself when the ground moves.
    • Set a hard line: "I will not debate during meltdowns. We pause, we cool, we revisit tomorrow." And stick to it - even if she rages. You can't reason with a storm.
    • Accept that "normal" might never come back. The sex, the plans, the trust - grieve it. Then decide: can I live with this version?

    But if breaking up feels like the only oxygen left... that's not betrayal. That's survival. Love doesn't mean martyrdom.

    You're not alone in this. There are quiet corners - private Facebook groups for NT partners of late-diagnosed autistics, or even r/Aspergers_partners on Reddit - where people say exactly what you're saying: "I tried. I loved. I burned out."

  • Thanks a lot for this, it does make me feel better. I've been feeling so utterly alone regarding this matter that any sense of someone understanding my situation makes a world of difference.

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