Are you currently in a long term romantic relationship?

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Are you in a long term romantic relationship?
Diagnosed/suspected AS/ASD FEMALE – I’m currently in a LTR 30%  30%  [ 34 ]
Diagnosed/suspected AS/ASD FEMALE – I’m NOT currently in a LTR 23%  23%  [ 26 ]
Diagnosed/suspected AS/ASD MALE – I’m currently in a LTR 18%  18%  [ 21 ]
Diagnosed/suspected AS/ASD MALE – I’m NOT currently in a LTR 27%  27%  [ 31 ]
I do not have AS/ASD and/or I just want to see the results 3%  3%  [ 3 ]
Total votes : 115

simon_says
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10 Mar 2011, 3:21 am

The results are pretty much what I expected.

It reminds me of the episode of Arrested Development where Charlize Theron's character is being pursued by Michael. He just keeps overlooking the fact that she is mentally disabled in some way because he's so attracted to her. In most cultures men are the sexual hunters and an introverted female will still be hunted.



ediself
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10 Mar 2011, 6:22 am

poppyfields wrote:
ediself wrote:
Bloodheart wrote:
Three years with my NT boyfriend...not sure I'd call it romantic though (I dislike romance).


5 years (almost) of non romantic relationship.


What makes it non-romantic? (different people could interpret that different ways)


Non romantic...As in, we do tell each other we still love each other, from time to time, to make sure we still want to be together. Because there are no other signs of it :) we live as friends, not much kissing or touching going on (during the day), no presents or gestures or anything that entails the other one having to prove his love likewise , which could escalate into a "romance battle" which someone would lose. We just let each other be, neither of us is very touchy feely, and we both need long hours of not talking to each other. If he comes to me or I come to him, we generally respond to the demand of the other, but we're not always side by side,we would fight endlessly if it were the case, "social overload" not helping. These days we don't even live in the same country anymore :P
Both pretty fine with it.



poppyfields
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10 Mar 2011, 6:45 am

I don't think having a partner makes you subclinical. For one thing, in american culture (and true for lots of other places too) men do a lot more of the pursuing than woman. Secondly, I have a very supportive partner, even though I wish he would do some researching on his own. I wasn't diagnosed until a year into our relationship, and now he's a lot more accmodating to some things. I think I would have an impossible time beyond the initial stage when attraction can get you pretty far, but then you need something more stable to build on. I think as an NT-AS couple (thoughh he has social anxiety and also not great social skills) we have a lot of issues other couples don't even get. For example last night he wanted to leave at 11:13 and usually we talk till midnight and it led to me melting down because I wasn't expecting a change in schedule. That to me isn't subclinical.



Kaybee
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10 Mar 2011, 7:01 am

Janissy wrote:
League_Girl wrote:
j0sh wrote:
League_Girl wrote:
I have been with my husband for three years.

I'm sure he's a very lucky guy. :-)

He is and never had a girlfriend before nor ever had sex. He has even attempted suicide like serveral times before we met but someone always came home before he could do it. Now he is the happiest guy. I was lucky he never did it or else I would have never met him and had this baby.

I hope some people who are feeling depressed and suicidal can see this. Things do get better. This is evidence. I bet if somebody had told him "three years from now you will be a happy husband and father" he would have cursed them for lying. But here he is, living a life with you and that cute son in your avatar which he probably never thought was possible before he met you.


I'm not feeling depressed or suicidal, but all the same, it does inspire a degree of optimism. I am very happy for you and your husband, League_Girl. :)


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HarryB
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10 Mar 2011, 11:37 am

j0sh wrote:
Are you in a long term romantic relationship… and do you have boy-parts or girl-parts?

We've been married for 37 years and dated throughout high school, so we've been best friends for about 40 years.

Long term? A neighbor couple was married for 75 years...

Romantic? I don't do the stuff that our consumer society claims is necessary to be romantic - the kind that takes money. But, we walk hand in hand whenever we're walking somewhere and ride a tandem bicycle together 3 or 4 days a week. And we spend almost every waking hour together, and always sleep together...

I can't find any boy-parts - nor any girl-parts either. But, I can find lots of man-parts.


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j0sh
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10 Mar 2011, 11:56 am

HarryB wrote:
I can't find any boy-parts - nor any girl-parts either. But, I can find lots of man-parts.


I was just trying to be playful in how I worded the question, because a closely related question usually turns into a mean spirited discussion. I'm happy that didn't happen.



starygrrl
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10 Mar 2011, 12:19 pm

Poke wrote:
I look at these results and think one thing: sub-clinical.


Sub-clinical means not needing or desiring medical intervention.

I kind of qualify as this at the moment, but I can tell you I have been at the clinical stage in some way or another throughout much of my life. Clinical stages do not last forever, they ultimately can go away as issues are resolved.

I will be honest, it has been my LTR which helped me heal some wounds I have, I have not had a meltdown in a YEAR. I used to melt down every couple of months. But I had therapy to help me identify and address the meltdowns.

Right now my issue is friendships. I have on occasion alienated friends with the meltdowns. I will live with that.



Poke
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10 Mar 2011, 12:46 pm

starygrrl wrote:
Poke wrote:
I look at these results and think one thing: sub-clinical.


Sub-clinical means not needing or desiring medical intervention.


In regard to autism, "sub-clinical" usually means having autistic traits, but not enough to meet the clinical criteria for a diagnosis. In regard to other conditions, the definition can vary quite a bit, often denoting an early "stage".

My comment was meant as a joke, by the way.



Callista
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10 Mar 2011, 2:00 pm

You need an option for "I do not want a relationship".


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FarqyTheIndolent
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22 Mar 2011, 8:27 pm

Female with diagnosed AS, and in a relationship with a male with diagnosed AS. It's my first relationship.

It's not strictly 'long-term', in that we've only been together for just over three months, but we aim for it to be long-term...



daydreamer84
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22 Mar 2011, 8:43 pm

I'm AS diagnosed, girl parts and no relationship. I had one (extremely short) failed marriage last year and am quite happy on my own at the moment....................



TTRSage
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22 Mar 2011, 10:42 pm

Diagnosed AS MALE age 60 – I’m NOT currently in a LTR. Last LTR I was in was back in 1995 and ended when I got dumped in favor of a wealthy barhopper. It took me a year and a half to recover from it.



Mithra
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23 Mar 2011, 12:59 am

Female, 33, undiagnosed but absolutely sure AS.
I have been in my current relationship going on 3 years (this July). We live together. This is the first relationship where my obsessions are a benefit rather than a deficit. He gets just as obsessed with technology and video games as I do, and neither of us feel left out when the other spends hours on the computer or console. My interests vary a bit more than his, but it doesn't matter since we can entertain ourselves. Just being together in the same room is enough many days; we don't have to talk or entertain each other (I've been known, in the past, to not say a single word to anyone for days).



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26 Mar 2011, 6:33 pm

RELATIONSHIP ADVICE PLEASE:

For the aspies that claim they are in a long-term relationship with NTs, I'd like to ask you a few questions:

1) What did you do to successfully initiate the relationship? What did you do to socially attract your bf or gf?

2) What have you done to successfully maintain the relationship or prevent it from falling apart?

I am asking these questions because I want to initiate and successfully maintain a healthy relationship with a woman in the future. So please help me out fellow aspies.



Jayo
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26 Mar 2011, 8:08 pm

tcorrielus wrote:
RELATIONSHIP ADVICE PLEASE:

For the aspies that claim they are in a long-term relationship with NTs, I'd like to ask you a few questions:

1) What did you do to successfully initiate the relationship? What did you do to socially attract your bf or gf?

I'm in my 30s, Aspie, married for almost 3 years to a wonderful woman & we've been together for almost 7 years. We have one daughter. I read up on Internet sources in the early 2000s for how to talk to women in a flirty/chatty way, and kept practicing (with my share of rejection) until it came natural, I just cracked jokes and didn't care about the outcome, but was still mindful of her concerns (i.e. holding the door for her), and let her call me more than vice-versa. Also I used plenty of email with witty comments that she found funny :D

2) What have you done to successfully maintain the relationship or prevent it from falling apart?

Well, to be honest, it's been challenging at times!! Mostly b/c of my short-term memory for multitasking, she asks me to do A,B,C, & D, and I 'll forget C or A or whatever - or I won't read between the lines as to the unstated expectations. That's caused her to get angry at me, but I calmly acknowledged her frustration and asked if she could not bombard me with too much at once, as I function best with one thing at a time. We seem to have reached a compromise on that. On keeping the relationship together, I am very attentive and affectionate with her, I'm usually the one who makes dinner, and still use the boyish cockiness & charm that I've worked on in the past. I will admit, somewhat ashamedly, that when I disclosed my disability to her back in 2007 after getting interrogated over my 'stubborness', she told me I don't really have autism. I blew up & lost my temper, nothing physically violent, but I did break a candlestick on the dresser amidst much yelling that she doesn't have a clue what autism spectrum is and stop pretending to be the expert. That caused her to break down in tears, saying that we shouldn't be together, and I got very upset and ashamed...apologised over and over again, bought her flowers, and so forth. We're still together...but I thought for sure I would have lost her from that meltdown. She made me a better person and vice-versa :D and we admit we both have our flaws but we have by and large enjoyed our journey together :) Regardless of whether we stay together, I just want our daughter to grow up and have a good life.

I am asking these questions because I want to initiate and successfully maintain a healthy relationship with a woman in the future. So please help me out fellow aspies.



shadowchyld
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27 Mar 2011, 7:20 am

starygrrl wrote:
Poke wrote:
I look at these results and think one thing: sub-clinical.


Sub-clinical means not needing or desiring medical intervention.

I kind of qualify as this at the moment, but I can tell you I have been at the clinical stage in some way or another throughout much of my life. Clinical stages do not last forever, they ultimately can go away as issues are resolved.

I will be honest, it has been my LTR which helped me heal some wounds I have, I have not had a meltdown in a YEAR. I used to melt down every couple of months. But I had therapy to help me identify and address the meltdowns.

Right now my issue is friendships. I have on occasion alienated friends with the meltdowns. I will live with that.


I've been in a relationship for 2 1/4 years. We have lived together a year now. I quoted this because I agree SO much. I have adapted really well to life lately, and am pretty comfortable in my skin as of right now, but there are still issues, just tolerable ones. As far as the meltdowns.... wow, this patience my boyfriend has with me has saved me in many ways... I kicked out his windshield during a meltdown maybe about 3 months after we started dating. He said to buy him a new windshield or he would be gone. Well, you know how some of us can be about letting go of somebody or something. So 200 dollars later, I realized "Wow, this guy really doesn't care about what kind of crazy s**t I do as long as I take responsibility for it. He loves me for me, and teaches me through holding me accountable." I had never really had anyone do that so patiently before. Glad to say two years later, now he can freak out at me the same ways sometimes, and scream at the top of his lungs, and I've learned for the most part to just separate myself until he calms down. LOL Funny how things work out, huh? Although, I will say, even though I don't meltdown so much these days, I still have my interesting aspergian days, so I don't want anybody to think he's a bad guy because he gets frustrated and yells, I would too sometimes if I had to deal with me. HAHA I'm happy and I'm lucky. And ya know what? He's a pretty lucky dude, too. :)

edit: By the way, the only thing I wish was different is sometimes I wish he wouldn't allow me to get away with stuff like he does. He will sometimes just stand by and watch while I do something when I actually wish he would speak up and say "Hey, you crazy b***h, what the heck do you think you're doing?" LOL The case of the windshield is a great example. He just leaned back in the seat and watched me as I kicked the crap out of that thing. Jerk :P