Aharon wrote:
My wife and I go round and round on this, but over time I have learned that just because she might have some nasty negative emotion to express to me, that it's not an all encompassing feeling or her "final vote" on our relationship. It took me years to learn that, and until I did, I reacted very poorly to her in those moments because I didn't understand what her feelings really meant.
I love my wife more than anything, but to this day she has doubts about that because my actions don't always match my words, so-to-speak. Your boyfriend may be kind of clueless that way too, but if it's like the way im reading it, he's probably crazy about you but hasn't learned how to deal with the not-so-much-fun part of the relationship that every couple is certain to have from time to time.
Another reason is an overactive self-preservation mechanism. If aspie guys learn nothing else in their early dating lives (or lack thereof), it's protecting themselves against heartbreak/rejection. Many a time, a young aspie guy had his heart broken by a girl who pretended to like him as a prank, by a girl who used him for his book smarts, or by a simple misunderstanding of friendship vs. romantic interest. As a result, they learn to control their romantic feelings with the precision of a computer. It becomes a personal challenge of sorts, a way of "beating the other person to the punch". Something like: "if you're about to lose interest in me, I'm going to lose interest in you first!" So when you two have an argument---in his mind, you're about to stop liking him---he looks for ways to shut off his feelings for you, as to avoid having his heart broken. I know I'm like that. Heck, my ability to turn my feelings on and off like that is more prolific than NTs' social skills, and that's saying a lot! I've always put together an exit plan before starting any relationship, and even keep my police department's non-emergency number stored in my cell phone. (I had to file for protection against someone one time, although it was a former friend who's a girl, not an ex-girlfriend.)