Mysty wrote:
It would have been nice to have an option for those of use whose living status (with or with out a sexual partner) hasn't changed in the past, well, 17 years in my case, and who thus can't vote for any of those options, so we could see the results without logging out.
Currently the votes are 3 yes, one sometimes, and zero for no.
auntblabby wrote:
why should an aspie have to mask his AS symptoms around his partner?
An Aspie shouldn't have to (IMHO), but I suspect we frequently do, in the early stages of a relationship, perhaps without even knowing we're masking. I've never deliberately masked any of my "faults" to a new partner, but I've somehow managed to mask stuff in the past, and more recently I've found it surprisingly difficult to police myself over that. In some strange way, I seem to become a different person when I've been with a longterm partner for a while, and I'd love to know how to keep my original lovely persona.......though maybe the problem is that in the early stages the lady is more of a lover than a partner, then she becomes a partner rather than a lover, and the two roles are competely different, i.e. I'm a great lover but a hopeless longterm partner? I once read a rather cynical idea - that most relationships go worng when the partners can no longer hide their true, obnoxious selves from each other any more. And some say that love is blind, which wouldn't help.
So I've sworn a solemn oath that if I ever start dating again, I'll make damned sure I tell them about every flaw I know about before the relationship becomes sexual, even at the risk of losing them......I'd also want to check out their flaws and appraise them for suitability, in the cold light of day, though I have a nasty habit of seeing prospective lovers through rose-tinted specs, and I've heard that everybody does that and there's no help for it. Love is a powerful emotion and it tends to make a mockery of reason every time.