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Seventy-two percent of people with autism also meet the diagnostic criteria
for posttraumatic stress disorder (Reuben, K.E., Stanzione, C.M, and
Singleton, J. L., 2021) There are a number of reasons for this. In general,
neurotypicals tend to find autistic people aversive. This can lead to
social trauma from bullying and abuse. Autistic people also have difficulty
reading social cues that neurotypicals take for granted. This social
impairment is one of the defining features of autism and leads to autistic
people being easy targets for abusers. Autistic people can struggle
with loneliness and isolation so when someone is willing to let them into their
lives, they often jump in with joy and are unable to see the red flags that
surround people who are abusive and/or toxic.
Autistic often people long for relationships and romantic love. According to
Grace et al. (2023), autistic people need relationships and struggle with
loneliness more than the neurotypical population. This loneliness is critical
to the high rates of abuse that autistic people experience. Autistic people
are often desperate for acceptance. According to Douglas and Sedgewick
(2023) autistic people experience “intimate partner violence and sexual assault”
significantly more than other populations and experience less support.
Autism creates specific vulnerabilities in intimate relationships.
What does this look like in real life? One client I worked with, Sally Q,
married a man who was overtly emotionally abusive and frequently sexually
abusive. He love-bombed her at the beginning of the relationship and made
her feel like she was exceptional and beloved and after he had married her,
he verbally abused and humiliated her. The problem was that she was
unable to recognize verbal abuse as abuse. Sally had been bullied her
entire life and her parents had also spent a considerable amount of time
listing her autistic traits as the primary reasons their life was a constant
struggle. To her, her husband’s behavior was normal. She didn’t
understand the intricacies of normal sexual intimacy enough to fully
comprehend how degrading and abusive the sexual acts he cohered her
into engaging in were.
Sally was a successful engineer and a mother. She was loving and
nurturing to her children, but she was blind to the abuse that was eroding
her will to live. Through therapy and over time, Sally was able to see what
was happening and leave her husband. She is still in trauma therapy with a
therapist who specializes in EMDR.
Another case was with a man who married a woman who love-bombed him
but then began to humiliate him verbally and emotionally after marriage.
They had two children together and she had numerous affairs, but he kept
believing if he stayed, she would return to her old, loving self. She
particularly focused on his autistic traits as a source of humiliation and
degradation and when he finally left, she called the police and told them he
tried to kill her. She had him arrested and all accusations were proven to be
false, but she used this to attempt to destroy his career. Even after he was
able to stop this, she continued to use the children to manipulate, humiliate,
and degrade him and stretched the divorce out over five years, finding
every chance she could to prolong events. She still harasses him and
falsely accuses him and those he loves of horrible acts on a regular basis.
Despite this, he didn’t fully comprehend how abusive this relationship was
or how abusive other relationships he had been in were. He couldn’t
recognize red flags and his lack of social filter often led to him being
ostracized or accidentally saying things that got him hurt.
THE BASICS
What Is Autism?
References
Haruvi-Lamdan, Nirit, Horesh, Shani Zohar, Kraus, Meital, & Golan, Ofer (2020). Autism
spectrum disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder: An unexplored co-occurence of
conditions. Autism 24 (4). 884-898
Leedham, Alexandra, Thompson, Andrew, R. Smith, Richard, & Freeth, Megan. (2019).
'I was exhausted trying to figure it out': The experiences of females receiving an autism
diagnosis in middle to late adulthood. Autism.
Opinion: Purple
Grammar:
Noun: Green
Verb: Orange
Adjective: Blue
Adverb: Brown
Preposition: Grey
Conjunction: Dark green
Nominal sentence: Turqouise
Verbal sentence:Yellow