mrwhite23 wrote:
Is anyone in or know of a Couple were both of them have aspergers?
and do you think aspie couples work out ok?
Me and my husband. we've been together for 6 years this year.
We're quite different but we complement each other very well.
Quote:
It depends on quirks. One person may be a very clean person and organized, the other not so much. Put the two together and it can compliment but it could also repel.
This is very true.
In our case, our personalities are quite different, but we complement each other very well. He's a particularly withdrawn introvert, but I'm an extrovert who often initiates communication. I'm not very good at reading faces either, but we spend a lot of time together so I had enough time to figure him out. Whenever I notice that something troubles him, I ask him what's wrong, and I push him until he reveals what the real problem is. It's not easy because he's alexithymic too, so he finds it very hard to talk about anything that affects him emotionally. Initally, these conversations went like the game "Twenty Questions": I had a guess, and he either nodded or shook his head -- but he got better afterwards.
It is also important to have shared interests, similar priorities in life and a similar level of intelligence.
As for interest, you don't have to have exactly the same areas of interest, but it's important to have a few shared interests and you should also be able to enjoy and respect the other one's achievements on their areas of interest.
As for priorities, it is important to have a shared system of values. If one of you is a non-conformist who doesn't care about money or about fitting in, and the other one wants to lead a conventional suburban life, it won't work out very well. Me and my husband are both non-conformists who reject the typical NT values (material success, popularity etc.).
As for intelligence, it's also pretty important that you should be in the same range. I think intelligence is a factor which hugely determines your system of values and approach to the world, almost as much as AS.