Berrygirl wrote:
... he got upset when I called on him unexpectedly one morning and 'got in his face' and told me I was annoying him. I was insulted by the fact that he got annoyed with me over what I perceived as normal behaviour and because he told me I had been 'yelping' at him! However, we made up and we're getting on even better than before.
The thing is, when we were fighting I confided in a close friend. And now that we're seeing each other again she's very upset and doens't respect me anymore. She doesn't have a problem with him being an aspie but she thinks he could be abusive becuase she perceives his overreaction and the fact he got mad at me as the sign of an abuser.
As well he told me he had been trying to be 'gentle' and 'sensitive' to my feelings by not getting mad first and she interpreted this as the sign of someone who tries to make you feel like you're responsible for their mood swing.
It sounds like this friend really just cares about you. Maybe she's been in an abusive relationship and is hyper vigilant for it. I doubt she's lost respect for you, but maybe she just feels worried or it's bringing up feelings from her past (if she's ever been involved in abuse.)
I wouldn't isolate yourself from your friends because of your boyfriend. They don't have to like him, as long as you can still do things together. If he is a good guy, then your true friends will probably learn to accept him. But it is important to keep friends, IMO, especially if they're just worried about you.
I've never had that similar of a problem, but my best friend once commented that the guy I was dating seemed "bipolar" and he turned out to be emotionally abusive, and not bipolar.
Has your boyfriend been diagnosed with AS?