TylerNT
New Member
My wife and I have been married for 2 years and together for 3.5 years. She was diagnosed 4 months ago with high functioning autism (She also has ADD, anxiety, and symptoms of PTSD). She has a specialist for autism, PTSD/Anxiety, we are going to a Sex Therapist for marriage counseling and the obvious, and I have a therapist for understanding more about autism and how to deal with everything changing overnight for us...All of the therapists have training in Autism).
Some background on my wife is she was emotionally abused by both parents growing up. She went straight from that environment into being in a relationship/marriage for a total of 10 years. This guy abused her in every way you can imagine. Physically beat her, every other word emotional abuse, restricting her from finding help even through church, he got heavily drunk every night which in turn almost every night he raped her, he restricted her from not seeing any friends, and in the end of the marriage cheated on her but forced her to be raped by a friend of his so he could prove she cheated on him first. After she left him (age 30), she moved back into her parents house and wanted to go to a therapist but her parents convinced her not to go.
Take all that in then read this next part>
So up until she met me she has spent her entire life building coping mechanisms to survive abusive relationships. Basically this means that she did her best to hide all of her "flaws" (autistic tendencies) from everyone in her life. She met me 2 years later in 2014. All I saw was a shell shocked woman who didn't know how to even speak to me. After she told me her life story I didn't question anything because everything she has been through for a NT it is still common for someone to act the way she did with me in the beginning. I spent 2 years helping her come out of her shell and learn to be loved, truly loved for the first time in her life. During this time I was helping her through the stress of 2 bad job situations among everything else.
When we got married, I confronted her mom and dad about constantly lying to her about her brother and constantly belittling her. Her dad quickly escalated the conversation and after we left that night, we were told later, her dad sat in his chair with his gun in his hand contemplating whether or not he was going to drive to the hotel to kill me and kill himself after. We told them we didn't want to speak with them for a while. After that she had a new job and she also had difficulty with the manager at that job as well. We went back to every day calming her down because everyday was bad. Due to her previous marriage one of her coping mechanisms with this was getting drunk. It took me 3 years to convince her to stop drinking for me but I finally did.
Take all that in then read this next part>
After we got married I started to realize that she took the time to make me happy/take care of me about 10% of the amount that I did for her. I love everything about my wife. I do not love her autism. I understand how difficult this is for her in dealing with the news that she is autistic. It is way more challenging for her. I understand that. After I realized that I wasn't being taken care of we went to therapists. When we received the diagnosis we changed therapists to ones qualified to help. My wife doesn't just struggle with the normal struggles of autism she also struggles with PTSD and anxiety. We know what needs to be done in our marriage to help both the marriage succeed. I know how much my wife has changed since I first met her. I know how this is a work in progress and how this is something I need to get used to. I am fine with that. I am worried that I will spend the next 20 years helping her and I will have lost who I am completely. I know people change but I would feel like I gave up on myself to take care of her. I understand that I love her and I understand how much she needs me.
I do not know how to be okay with waiting. We talk everyday, and she writes down most of what we say and we even go over it again after we talk. When we are arguing or fighting we text/message each other. She constantly says she is going to fix what we talk about and has a strong desire to do so. She either forgets, or doesn't remind herself. She doesn't want to be autistic. She is still having a tough time accepting that she is.
I do not know if I am writing to just tell our story and talk about it. Or if I am writing to ask your opinion on do you think it is possible for someone who is autistic and has been through as much as my wife has to relearn new coping mechanisms and learn how to be there for me when she has spent her whole life trying to avoid being in all the emotional/physical positions/situations she is with me because in the past it always meant she was going to be hurt? I know that NT people who go through everything she has gone through can take a long time to get over all of that even with therapy and medication. Sometimes they never get over it. It feels like most of the time her Autism causes her to process/work through something at about 20% when compared to the way someone who is NT would.
Another one of my fears is let's say there are 8 things I need her to relearn new ways to deal with them in our relationship (compared to how she used to deal with them in her past). Let's say she does in fact relearn them. Can she be able to pick up on those 8 things as they happen? Or will her autism only allow her to pick up on them if she was focused and trying to find them? Because if she had a stressed out/emotional day and comes home and I take care her to calm her down I never see her be able to look past what she is feeling to think about how my day was or what our needs are in our marriage on that particular day.
I could go on and on but I think this will get the conversation started and I could explain more as you ask questions. I am open to opinions, thoughts, questions, etc.
Some background on my wife is she was emotionally abused by both parents growing up. She went straight from that environment into being in a relationship/marriage for a total of 10 years. This guy abused her in every way you can imagine. Physically beat her, every other word emotional abuse, restricting her from finding help even through church, he got heavily drunk every night which in turn almost every night he raped her, he restricted her from not seeing any friends, and in the end of the marriage cheated on her but forced her to be raped by a friend of his so he could prove she cheated on him first. After she left him (age 30), she moved back into her parents house and wanted to go to a therapist but her parents convinced her not to go.
Take all that in then read this next part>
So up until she met me she has spent her entire life building coping mechanisms to survive abusive relationships. Basically this means that she did her best to hide all of her "flaws" (autistic tendencies) from everyone in her life. She met me 2 years later in 2014. All I saw was a shell shocked woman who didn't know how to even speak to me. After she told me her life story I didn't question anything because everything she has been through for a NT it is still common for someone to act the way she did with me in the beginning. I spent 2 years helping her come out of her shell and learn to be loved, truly loved for the first time in her life. During this time I was helping her through the stress of 2 bad job situations among everything else.
When we got married, I confronted her mom and dad about constantly lying to her about her brother and constantly belittling her. Her dad quickly escalated the conversation and after we left that night, we were told later, her dad sat in his chair with his gun in his hand contemplating whether or not he was going to drive to the hotel to kill me and kill himself after. We told them we didn't want to speak with them for a while. After that she had a new job and she also had difficulty with the manager at that job as well. We went back to every day calming her down because everyday was bad. Due to her previous marriage one of her coping mechanisms with this was getting drunk. It took me 3 years to convince her to stop drinking for me but I finally did.
Take all that in then read this next part>
After we got married I started to realize that she took the time to make me happy/take care of me about 10% of the amount that I did for her. I love everything about my wife. I do not love her autism. I understand how difficult this is for her in dealing with the news that she is autistic. It is way more challenging for her. I understand that. After I realized that I wasn't being taken care of we went to therapists. When we received the diagnosis we changed therapists to ones qualified to help. My wife doesn't just struggle with the normal struggles of autism she also struggles with PTSD and anxiety. We know what needs to be done in our marriage to help both the marriage succeed. I know how much my wife has changed since I first met her. I know how this is a work in progress and how this is something I need to get used to. I am fine with that. I am worried that I will spend the next 20 years helping her and I will have lost who I am completely. I know people change but I would feel like I gave up on myself to take care of her. I understand that I love her and I understand how much she needs me.
I do not know how to be okay with waiting. We talk everyday, and she writes down most of what we say and we even go over it again after we talk. When we are arguing or fighting we text/message each other. She constantly says she is going to fix what we talk about and has a strong desire to do so. She either forgets, or doesn't remind herself. She doesn't want to be autistic. She is still having a tough time accepting that she is.
I do not know if I am writing to just tell our story and talk about it. Or if I am writing to ask your opinion on do you think it is possible for someone who is autistic and has been through as much as my wife has to relearn new coping mechanisms and learn how to be there for me when she has spent her whole life trying to avoid being in all the emotional/physical positions/situations she is with me because in the past it always meant she was going to be hurt? I know that NT people who go through everything she has gone through can take a long time to get over all of that even with therapy and medication. Sometimes they never get over it. It feels like most of the time her Autism causes her to process/work through something at about 20% when compared to the way someone who is NT would.
Another one of my fears is let's say there are 8 things I need her to relearn new ways to deal with them in our relationship (compared to how she used to deal with them in her past). Let's say she does in fact relearn them. Can she be able to pick up on those 8 things as they happen? Or will her autism only allow her to pick up on them if she was focused and trying to find them? Because if she had a stressed out/emotional day and comes home and I take care her to calm her down I never see her be able to look past what she is feeling to think about how my day was or what our needs are in our marriage on that particular day.
I could go on and on but I think this will get the conversation started and I could explain more as you ask questions. I am open to opinions, thoughts, questions, etc.