Love is blind - Marriage is the eye-opener
This afternoon, I'm pleased to present a guest blog from my friend and fellow author David Finch, whose Journal of Best Practices makes its debut in bookstores in just three more weeks . . .
When
people meet me for the first time, they’re often surprised to learn that I have
Asperger syndrome. “Oh, my,” they say,
sometimes slowly and clearly, as though they’re now addressing a child. “It is really remarkable how well you’re able to handle yourself
socially.”
As compliments go, it’s not so
bad. Still, I can’t help but feel a
little like an unfrozen Neanderthal when I hear comments like that. “You mean to tell me you’re only
thirty-four years old and you managed to come here all by yourself?” The implication is that two minutes ago
I was just another dude standing around in a sport coat, smiling unexpectedly,
but now that I’ve outed myself, I’m Asperger Guy, and it’s a wonder I haven’t
been yapping the whole time about pygmy fruit bats or the history of the shoe.
What
can I say? People are bound to be
surprised. One of my special talents is
masking certain behaviors, a skill set I’ve been cultivating since childhood,
when began my lifelong career of wanting to blend in. Even I didn’t know I had Asperger’s until I
was thirty years old; the prevailing diagnosis throughout my early life was
that I was peculiar. Talk to me long
enough, or catch a glimpse of me lumbering around the cocktail party, and you’d
find this assessment still to be fairly accurate. But at first glance, you might not call it
Asperger’s. This is not uncommon. Some with Asperger’s may appear more or less
not-Aspergian depending on the circumstances.
I could possibly elude a diagnosis if I assumed the right character
while talking to a psychologist for an hour or two.
My wife, Kristen, knows this all too
well. We had been friends for years—I
was always that special (dorky) friend of hers, the quirky one who made her
laugh in a certain way that no one else could—and one day, we found ourselves
in love. We dated for a year, a period
of time that, in some ways, felt like a twelve-month-long audition. Be cool, I told myself, roughly ten-thousand times a day. Look normal. Act normal.
We got engaged, and still I did
everything I could to impress her, because, as I understood it, that’s what a
person did when they landed themselves a fiancée. I showered Kristen with affection and praise,
went out of my way to act supportive, and never once voiced a negative thought
or feeling. What was not to love about that guy?
After we were married, and we were
living together around the clock, Kristen began to understand exactly what was
hard to love about that guy: he wasn’t entirely real. By our third anniversary,
the illusion I’d created had been shattered, and Kristen found herself married
not to the husband she’d always wanted, but to a husband who had no idea how to
go with the flow. A husband who lost his
temper whenever his concentration was disrupted—even when it was disrupted by
an act of affection, such as a kiss or a simple hello. A husband who couldn’t show her the kind of
support she needed.
Despite the fact that she had been
working with children with autism for several years, Kristen hadn’t recognized
my mixed bag of baffling behaviors and frequent man-tantrums as Asperger’s (of
course, no one else, including me, had recognized this either). We had been married nearly five years before
her suspicions reached an apogee and she realized I could actually be on the
spectrum. Some are amazed by this, but
it does not surprise me at all.
A toad analogy, if I may. I’ve been told that if you toss a frog into a
pot of boiling water, it will immediately try to escape, but if you place a
frog in a pot of water at room temperature and gradually bring it to a boil,
the frog will not try to escape; it’ll just boil to death. (I don’t know who on earth conducted these
experiments, but I like to think it’s true.
We can also assume that I’ll be the one in hot water for making my wife
a frog in my own analogy...)
Marriage can be a slow boil. When you’re married, and things aren’t going
so great, the threshold of pain and drama and wackiness tends to creep up
imperceptibly as you go about your daily lives.
If, when you were blissfully dating, you could somehow fast-forward to a
period in your marriage when that threshold of pain is unfathomably high—five,
ten, fifteen years into the future—you would experience the darkness all at
once, and you might decide to walk away from the relationship, to leap from the
pot. It would be that alarming. “Good lord, is this what our marriage
is going to look like?! Welp, nice
knowing you, do not keep in touch.” But life doesn’t work that way. Instead, you just sit in the pot, day after
day, and boil to death, acclimated for better or for worse to the suffocating
conditions.
There is another reason we wouldn’t
have thought to call it Asperger’s sooner: I had never expressed to Kristen
just how challenging certain situations were for me. Like how difficult it was to navigate social
interactions, how exhausting it was for me to be “on” around other people, or
how upsetting it was whenever my routine was disturbed. I hadn’t spent a great deal of time
contemplating these things about myself.
All I knew was that I seemed different from other people, yet prior to
my diagnosis I just wanted to fit in. I
wanted to seem, for lack of a better term and knowing full well that a word
such as the one I’m about to use can swiftly, if unintentionally, stoke the ire
of commenters everywhere, normal. As a
guy who assigned unique personalities to numbers, was it asking too much to
seem normal? I mean, who wants to think
of themselves as being inferior? Who
wouldn’t feel inferior if they were being mocked on a regular basis, even as an
adult? Who has the presence of mind to
say yes to their freaky, extraordinary selves, especially if they don’t know
it’s okay—nay, advantageous—to be different?
So, how could Kristen have known
what it was like to be me? I barely knew
what it was like to be me—I didn’t even know there was a clinical name for
being like me.
When she realized how many similarities I
had with Aspergians, Kristen sat me down and guided me through a very informal
evaluation. Though I am grateful to be
married to someone who doesn’t spend her days regarding me through a diagnostic
lens, I’m glad that Kristen instinctually pieced it together and invited me to
participate in the evaluation. A person
can learn a lot about himself when he answers more than a hundred questions
designed to reveal precisely how his mind works. For the first time I understood who I am. And Kristen finally understood, too.
Until we went through that exercise,
she could not possibly have known just how difficult it was for me to adapt to
things, or how great a challenge it was for me just to understand how to be
responsive to her needs. Or, in her
words: “I never could have imagined how hard it sometimes is for you to simply be.”
That’s how Asperger syndrome can so thoroughly
destroy a relationship that at one time seemed invulnerable. If it’s well-hidden, and you’re not
specifically looking for it, the condition can reveal itself slowly, one misunderstanding
and baffling meltdown at a time. But for
Kristen and me it’s no longer hidden, and we used this knowledge of the
so-called disorder to rebuild our marriage.
With my diagnosis she found patience and understanding, I found
self-acceptance and the will to learn to manage the behaviors that strained our
relationship, and together—together—we are finding our way to the marriage we always wanted.
And it makes me wonder, as I sit
here scripting tomorrow’s inevitable didactic lecture on pygmy fruit bats: How
many of us are struggling with something that reveals itself in such cruelly
deceptive ways? How many of us are
plainly misunderstood, even by those who know and love us best?
AUTHOR BIO:
David Finch is an author and lecturer. His debut memoir, THE JOURNAL OF BEST PRACTICES (Scribner;
January 3, 2012) is available for pre-order now. David lives in Illinois with his wife and
their two children. Please join him on Facebook.
Comments
The past 3 or so months have been especially trying and I was nearly in tears at my desk when instead of telling me he loved me as he left for a short trip, he simply texted "leaving now."
Reading your article has made all the difference in the world today.
Thank You!
After being together for 6 years we took the plunge in 2007 and my spunky, quirky boyfriend turned into a seemingly detail obsessed, more than occasionally churlish and terse husband. I was baffled about why he would keep me up to the wee hours talking endlessly about politics and economics and cars or get snippy if I didn't agree with him about seemingly small, unimportant details. I tried to remain polite but it did start to get to me.
After some self tests, professional evaluation and counseling, he recieved the diagnosis and it was like a light was shed on all the past idiosyncrasies. A new sense of peace and relief washed over both of us.
Learning about Aspergers gave me the a chance to better empathise with him and him with me. I learned that the sometimes tactless comments rarely if ever come from a mean-spirited place and he learned that I have needs and interest that are not necessarily a mirror reflection of his own. Since then we've been able to re-evaluate our approaches to the issues life can present as a team and with confidence that we are both in each other's corners.
Of course there are still challenges; it hasn't always been a euphoric dreamworld but I'd say it's close... and improving every day ;)
In LMITE and BD I have written about what I know, and while that is likely of value to a gay guy or female, it is far from being the whole story and we would all benefit if someone emerged to write about those perspectives from firsthand experience.