How on earth could I have been married to a man for 15 years and not recognise that he had Asperger Syndrome?
Okay, in my defense, he didn’t know it either. He thought he was normal and everyone else was strange. I guess when it comes down to it, we all kind of feel that way.
Looking back, there were clues.
I was absolutely certain of my feelings from day one, but he seemed to need some convincing. ‘He’s just cautious’, I thought. He wanted to see me all the time, but never made eye contact when we were together.
I felt like we had a strong physical connection. I could feel him shiver at my touch, but he never made a move. ‘He’s holding back’, I thought. My flirtations went ignored, seemingly unnoticed. ‘He’s just shy’, I thought.
We’d talk on the phone for hours, or rather. he’d talk for hours. He could spend an eternity chatting about books and politics and the movie Blade Runner. I liked his enthusiasm. ‘Who cares if I never got a word in edgewise? He’s just passionate’, I thought.
Then I began to notice he took even the slightest criticism to mean I hated him and we were over. ‘He’s just intense?’ I wondered. I figured things would change after we got married, once he had the security of knowing I wouldn’t leave like the last one, and the one before that.
But things didn’t change. He still didn’t look me in the eye, didn’t bother to buy gifts for my birthday or our anniversary, didn’t embrace me when my mother died.
Top Comments
My son has Aspergers, he has no problem with eye contact. He is kind, sensitive and loving. Aspergers is not the same in everyone just as we are not the same.
My son has Aspergers, he can make eye contact just fine. He is the most sensitive, caring loving boy, very in tune to peoples feelings. Aspergers doesn’t always look the same, just as we don’t!