Amanda Tendler is on the spectrum, and here answers the question ‘How does it feel to date an autistic woman?‘…
It feels like a superhuman attempt at empathising with a neurology that is completely different than your own.
It feels lonely, frustrating, confusing, rigid, cold, hurtful, and heartbreaking.
It feels like experiencing life in the same way that the autistic person has experienced the world since they first tried to integrate: lonely, frustrating, confusing, rigid, cold, hurtful, and heartbreaking.
It takes a certain kind of partner to willingly want to engage in empathising with a neurology different than their own. It’s a superhuman effort. It is, in fact, impossible to achieve as we autistic folks well know. Approximation is the best you can get.
And it’s so, so, so difficult. One of my partners told me that he is able to get along without a hitch with virtually every single person he comes into contact with – except me. That’s part of what drew him to me – I’m an enigma. It’s enticing and novel in theory, but engaging with that on top of the day to day general relationship stuff everyone deals with? It gets old after a while.
Autistic people call it burnout because we have to engage with a different neurology any time we leave the house – guaranteed. I don’t think there is a name for it in partners of people on the spectrum because it’s more of a choice. They can find a partner with a similar neurology much more easily, statistically speaking.