davidbanner99@ wrote:... an ability to see myself as others see me and, thereby, understand why relationships are so remote. Pretty much all HFA people never make this leap of relativity but it is possible to do.
That would be a good, if potentially painful, insight. I doubt very much Husband can make it. It's also possible that his mother's shouting and withdrawal plus my nagging and withdrawal have made him stubborn as a mule.
There's another issue I may not have made clear. Husband is profoundly deaf in one ear and has limited hearing in the other. Or is he? Not long ago he found information about Auditory Processing Disorder and decided he had that as well as aspergers. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/auditory- ... -disorder/ Apparently his mind wanders uncontrollably anytime someone other than him is speaking.

His hearing wasn't tested until he started school. I was shocked that for the first five years of his life neither of his parents had realised he couldn't hear them and obviously extended family didn't care enough to notice; that an outsider had to do it.
The emotions that get trapped and bottled up within are mostly negative. That is, always feeling I did something wrong or feeling alienated. Fact is the connection just isn't there and to get an idea of that you should watch...
I don't think I need to, but I've made a note about Carnival Of Souls to see if we can watch it tonight. I'm sure he'll get fired up about it and start excitedly telling me he's got this, that and the other symptom right when I need to be winding down for bed. (We both of us collect symptoms of our pathology and wonder how we function at all.)
The problem is the process of intellect over-riding emotional functions goes on over years. We have to draw on intellect to try and function socially.
I agree, and that's where I try to get through to Husband. I repeatedly point out that he'll talk over me with a different topic when I'm in full flight, telling me: "I knew what you were going to say." So I ask him to tell me what I was talking about, and he's invariably got it wrong. I believe he chimes in with a different topic because he's lost concentration. How insulting is that??
I fully understand how I'm supposed to smile and show interest, keep to the chosen theme, not switch the topic to my own areas of absorption, not grin on hearing bad news, and so on.
Yes, why do you lot DO that? The time I stayed away more than four years I left with an image of him grinning all over his face in the front doorway of his mother's home. She was beside him crying, presumably because she was losing her last hope of handing him over some day.
I was relieved to be away from the craziness but I thought about him literally every day for the first two years. I'd take my first cup of coffee out to the garden and ask myself: "How do I feel about Husband now?"
he correct reactions don't happen and can't be forced. Even worse, the more you compensate intellectually, the more your analytical capacity develops, making you colder and remote. It's a vicious circle. I suppose I ought to be now looking at management approaches but long-term developmental delays cause severe obstacles.
Well, David, I think it's up to you to figure out the way through. Wouldn't that be a great thing to have done!?!