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marriedsinglemomma
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15 Mar 2010, 2:09 am

new here and looking to make life in our household a little more comfortable.

My husband and I belive that he has undiagnosed Asperger's, in fact we would bet the house on it. I stumbled on Asperger's while researching the behaviors of my twin boys, that I feel are not up to par with other children similar in age and have felt this way since birth, however Dr's brush me off or tell me they are too young and have met or exceeded milestones so we wait.

in the meantime, back to my husband. I really want to help him be more comfortable in our house. I don't allways understand and most often feel like I am a married single mother of twins, two dogs, a cat and a husband, but we have found ways to cope.

Our biggest issue is he must deal with me who has ADHD, our very high needs fussy and needy twin boys, barking dogs pet hair and a stinky cat. I used to think he was just a jerk :oops: ...but now I understand it is not his fault and I want to help.

The kids are still toddlers, but i can tell they find it hard when he shuts down and does not want to be very close to them or shuts them out cause he is overloaded by the cries, screams and banging that is toddler life. When he is ready to be close and open to them...the timing is off and they either do not want to be touched or they want to play. Does this make sense.

I would love to say that I do everything I can to keep things quiet, smelling non offensive etc. However with my husband regularily shutting down and boarding up in his room with headphones on, this leaves a lot on my to do list and most to little gets done. It not possible to pack everyone up and leave everytime he needs to decompress.

If anyone has tips either from a NT or ASPIE point of view on how to be a happy family with an Aspie in the family.



League_Girl
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15 Mar 2010, 2:33 am

http://asdrelationships.freeforums.org/
Not a ASD parenting forum of course


Earplugs. I plan to wear them when I have kids.



alana
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15 Mar 2010, 3:27 am

wow, it sounds like you have your hands full. It sounds like you need support at least as much if not more than he does. I am around my nephews every day, who are one and two, but I can leave when I want to. How willing is he to address that there are difficulties?



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15 Mar 2010, 5:15 am

Just be there for him, and help him to feel that he's accepted. If he wants to tell you about a special interest, let him. Treat him like you treat the other adults in your life, and don't ever raise your voice at him.


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Janissy
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15 Mar 2010, 6:20 am

Buy him some earplugs. If his biggest problem is the noise, this would let him stay in the same room as the children while not being overloaded by their loudness.



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15 Mar 2010, 7:05 am

marriedsinglemomma wrote:
new here and looking to make life in our household a little more comfortable.

My husband and I belive that he has undiagnosed Asperger's, in fact we would bet the house on it. I stumbled on Asperger's while researching the behaviors of my twin boys, that I feel are not up to par with other children similar in age and have felt this way since birth, however Dr's brush me off or tell me they are too young and have met or exceeded milestones so we wait.

in the meantime, back to my husband. I really want to help him be more comfortable in our house. I don't allways understand and most often feel like I am a married single mother of twins, two dogs, a cat and a husband, but we have found ways to cope.

Our biggest issue is he must deal with me who has ADHD, our very high needs fussy and needy twin boys, barking dogs pet hair and a stinky cat. I used to think he was just a jerk :oops: ...but now I understand it is not his fault and I want to help.

The kids are still toddlers, but i can tell they find it hard when he shuts down and does not want to be very close to them or shuts them out cause he is overloaded by the cries, screams and banging that is toddler life. When he is ready to be close and open to them...the timing is off and they either do not want to be touched or they want to play. Does this make sense.

I would love to say that I do everything I can to keep things quiet, smelling non offensive etc. However with my husband regularily shutting down and boarding up in his room with headphones on, this leaves a lot on my to do list and most to little gets done. It not possible to pack everyone up and leave everytime he needs to decompress.

If anyone has tips either from a NT or ASPIE point of view on how to be a happy family with an Aspie in the family.


Hello there and I do love your nickname.

Sounds like you are being very supportive and understanding. He sounds a lot like me :!:

You've actually given me a few things to think about, so thank you for that.

Get some good books.

I just finished a great book; 'Alone together; making and Asperger marriage work' by Katrin Bentley (an NT married to an AS husband)

I cried in parts and then gave the book to my wife to read; she is NT.

My wife commented that at least now she knows that she 'isn't the only one' :!:

Welcome to Wrong Planet :D


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DenvrDave
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15 Mar 2010, 12:53 pm

Greetings and welcome to WP! :D I understand your question is mainly about your relationship with your husband, but this part of your post caught my attention:

marriedsinglemomma wrote:
I stumbled on Asperger's while researching the behaviors of my twin boys, that I feel are not up to par with other children similar in age and have felt this way since birth, however Dr's brush me off or tell me they are too young and have met or exceeded milestones so we wait.


There is an excellent section of WP called "Parents' Discussion" that may be able to help with parenting questions. Also, if what your Dr is telling you about your children doesn't quite jibe with your instincts, I suggest, for the sake of your children, getting a second a opinion from a Dr who is well-versed in autism spectrum disorders. Best of luck! Hope to see you around the forums!



bethaniej
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15 Mar 2010, 5:31 pm

I think its good you want to be supportive, but you also need to be realistic. I suggest sitting down together and going over your expectations of each other. Let him know what YOU need. Maybe since you suspect he's AS, making a family schedule would be good. My daughter lives by ritual. Maybe scheduling his time with the kids would be good....and you have some free time during that. Then schedule some family time....and finally, the down time he needs. That way you don't always feel like the single Mom.



bethaniej
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15 Mar 2010, 6:37 pm

btw....I just wanted to mention that I am a single parent of an AS/ADHD daughter. I've been diagnosed with ADD and take meds....and suspect I also have some AS traits. But for the most part, I'm a good mom. I don't think an undiagnosed disorder such as AS means you are a bad or unsupportive parent. For myself I have to take things slow. My daughter knows I need a few minutes in my room by myself as soon as I get home from work (she gets home a bit earlier on the bus). I take a few minutes of quiet, sit in a chair, maybe a read a little. Then I got out and spend the evening. I've been raising her by myself for a long time. We've had a lot of challenges along the way. But I want to mention this because it does sound like you are doing a LOT on your own...and i hate when married women feel that way. Spouses who are parents need to be mutually supportive in the best way they can/know how.

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marriedsinglemomma
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20 Mar 2010, 5:35 pm

Thanks to everyone for the feedback. I find alot of peace in knowing that I am not alone and that it is not neccesarily his fault. And we had great sucess in ear plugs, so much that I think we own stock. But I will try suggesting them at more favorable times such as the hour before bedtime when the boys get quite hectic.



marriedsinglemomma
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20 Mar 2010, 5:41 pm

Blindspot149 wrote:
marriedsinglemomma wrote:
new here and looking to make life in our household a little more comfortable.

My husband and I belive that he has undiagnosed Asperger's, in fact we would bet the house on it. I stumbled on Asperger's while researching the behaviors of my twin boys, that I feel are not up to par with other children similar in age and have felt this way since birth, however Dr's brush me off or tell me they are too young and have met or exceeded milestones so we wait.

in the meantime, back to my husband. I really want to help him be more comfortable in our house. I don't allways understand and most often feel like I am a married single mother of twins, two dogs, a cat and a husband, but we have found ways to cope.

Our biggest issue is he must deal with me who has ADHD, our very high needs fussy and needy twin boys, barking dogs pet hair and a stinky cat. I used to think he was just a jerk :oops: ...but now I understand it is not his fault and I want to help.

The kids are still toddlers, but i can tell they find it hard when he shuts down and does not want to be very close to them or shuts them out cause he is overloaded by the cries, screams and banging that is toddler life. When he is ready to be close and open to them...the timing is off and they either do not want to be touched or they want to play. Does this make sense.

I would love to say that I do everything I can to keep things quiet, smelling non offensive etc. However with my husband regularily shutting down and boarding up in his room with headphones on, this leaves a lot on my to do list and most to little gets done. It not possible to pack everyone up and leave everytime he needs to decompress.

If anyone has tips either from a NT or ASPIE point of view on how to be a happy family with an Aspie in the family.


Hello there and I do love your nickname.

Sounds like you are being very supportive and understanding. He sounds a lot like me :!:

You've actually given me a few things to think about, so thank you for that.

Get some good books.

I just finished a great book; 'Alone together; making and Asperger marriage work' by Katrin Bentley (an NT married to an AS husband)

I cried in parts and then gave the book to my wife to read; she is NT.

My wife commented that at least now she knows that she 'isn't the only one' :!:

Welcome to Wrong Planet :D


Thank you for the suggestion, I am going to see if i can find the book at the libary and if not online. I can't wait to read it. I love reading and learning how other people see the world from their situation and how they manage. Thanks for your honesty as well :)



CockneyRebel
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20 Mar 2010, 5:42 pm

I'm glad that I could help, the best I could. :)


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marriedsinglemomma
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20 Mar 2010, 5:48 pm

DenvrDave wrote:
Greetings and welcome to WP! :D I understand your question is mainly about your relationship with your husband, but this part of your post caught my attention:

marriedsinglemomma wrote:
I stumbled on Asperger's while researching the behaviors of my twin boys, that I feel are not up to par with other children similar in age and have felt this way since birth, however Dr's brush me off or tell me they are too young and have met or exceeded milestones so we wait.


There is an excellent section of WP called "Parents' Discussion" that may be able to help with parenting questions. Also, if what your Dr is telling you about your children doesn't quite jibe with your instincts, I suggest, for the sake of your children, getting a second a opinion from a Dr who is well-versed in autism spectrum disorders. Best of luck! Hope to see you around the forums!


Thank you I will pop on and check out that section. I am hoping to find a dr that can help us with diagnosis for both husband if he is willing and children if they continue on the same path as they have. With my one son is is eceptionally challenging as he is deaf and hard of hearing so it can be hard to diferentiate some of the aspie traits vs hard of hearing and plain just being a toddler. As a mom I would love to have a formal diagnosis so I can move forward and get him anyhelp that they may need. But I think the dr's want to wait stuff out to see if they will grow out of it or if it is just toddler quirkyness...But I have felt since birth that they were not quite like the other kids...and it is one of those persistant feelings...so I keep on pressing the issue.



marriedsinglemomma
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20 Mar 2010, 5:58 pm

bethaniej wrote:
I think its good you want to be supportive, but you also need to be realistic. I suggest sitting down together and going over your expectations of each other. Let him know what YOU need. Maybe since you suspect he's AS, making a family schedule would be good. My daughter lives by ritual. Maybe scheduling his time with the kids would be good....and you have some free time during that. Then schedule some family time....and finally, the down time he needs. That way you don't always feel like the single Mom.


Ok I promise this is the last direct quote response :)

Thank you as well....We do somthings on a strict schedule, but I find that causes alot of stress as if we create a schedule and somthing comes up or is not followed there is very little leincy and it results in quite the fall out. at this point i am not sure which is less tramatic a schedule or lack of one...we do alot of trial and error.

And yes I do bear the brunt of the responsibilty but I can not let him accept all the blame for it either. I tend to be a if you want somthing done right just do it yourself kinda gal...If i know that something will result in conflict I will try and do it to avoid it...even though i know that it is better to deal with it...it is just quicker and more pleasant to just do it. that is until I realize I have taken on too much and have a meltdown...which helps no one.

All I can do is laugh and try again tomarrow :)



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20 Mar 2010, 6:44 pm

Heh, you know it's hectic when the NT's the one having the meltdowns.

My mom says that the toddler years are some of the most stressful years of parenting, before the kids are civilized. (Teen years are second hardest, apparently.)

Does your hubby have a quiet place of his own (an office or something of that sort) he can go to if he's stressed?


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marriedsinglemomma
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21 Mar 2010, 10:15 am

Yes we have had seperate offices since the day we bought our house. Someone asked us if we would merge our offices when the twins get older or if we try for another child...We both looked appaled. We each have an office and it is seperated by a room for sound coushion!! We would have to divorce or buy a new house...sharing office space is not optional.

with his Aspergers he needs a place where he can shut the door and be alone and also do his OCD type things or imerse himself in what ever all comsuming project he has taken on...And for me and my ADHD I get one room where no one can tell me how messy it can or can't be...it is the one room i do not have to clean for company, and if I choose to hoard a few dishes no one is the wiser. :oops:

It is also where we eat :)

I agree if the NT is stressing it is not good...I tend to weather the storm :)