logo
My husband is neuro diverse and doesn't want sex – is this connected?

My husband is neuro diverse and doesn't want sex – is this connected?

Telegraph07-03-2025
Have a sex or relationship question? Ask Rachel about it using the form below or email askrachel@telegraph.co.uk Dear Rachel,
You talk a lot about men who want sex and women who do not...what about when it's the other way? My autistic husband has had almost zero interest since our first child was two years old. He was 31. He's now 42 and has rejected me over and over for years. I don't know if I will ever be desired by him. It's breaking my heart (and our marriage). Please can you look at this dynamic and at neuro divergent relationships, or those where one is ND, one is NT? Thanks
– NT
Dear NT,
NT stands for neuro typical, which is what you say you are compared to your ND (neuro divergent) hubby. It's interesting, isn't it? Eighty years ago (ie within dear readers' lifetimes) nobody would stick these labels on themselves or each other and would have just grimly 'got on with it' till death us do part. In your short letter to me, you have used three words (NT, ND, the third is 'autistic') that would have been Greek to my grandparents. Autism and Asperger's were first described as distinct conditions rather than merely different aspects of the human character in the 1940s, but didn't become part of 'the conversation' until the 1980s onwards.
With that throat-clearing preamble out of the way, to your question and all I can say is…aaargggh! You have caught me out. On every front. You are absolutely right to flag the structural imbalance in the column, with so many of my letters – I'd say almost three quarters – from men mourning the premature death of their sex lives.
It's hard to find new words and fresh answers to this very common concern (look, it turns out to be so common I am reluctant to say it's a problem). And you're right, we don't look at the inverse situation nearly enough, although I have had a letter or two from similarly rejected and dejected women that I've tried to tackle, perhaps not very successfully.
Readers should know that I recognise the imbalance and am the hunt for a male therapist who can join the crack team of counsellors, but for now, I have asked Sophie Laybourne for her input. She points out that in couples where there is any neuro divergence it can be draining and thus affect the sex life. If you don't want to open up the marriage, she says, you may have to mourn the loss of the partner and relationship you will never perhaps have and 'celebrate the ND traits that will have consciously and unconsciously attracted you to your partner in the first place'. She has questions, as do I. 'Was sex OK in the past? What goes on outside the bedroom that may have led to a loss of interest?' Was it parenthood, for example?
Your letter is so brief that it's unclear whether your husband's autism is an official diagnosis or whether he is yet another product of a bleak English upbringing/private boarding school with remote and unavailable parents or abusive teachers who were in loco parentis (I refer you to Earl Spencer's memoir of Maidwell Hall). If it's the former, rather than the latter, you should know that according to the expert Maxine Aston, once there is an official diagnosis of ASD (autism spectrum disorder) some partners chose to leave on the basis that the ND brain does not change and will not respond to insight.
'As for him not wanting sex – there may be squillions of reasons that have nothing to do with ND. He may be very angry (for example) at being labelled ND when he isn't,' Laybourne adds. 'She might also like to think about what unconscious investment she has in being 'rejected ' over and over again?' That's a thought, isn't it? You may have become hooked on this pattern in some way.
At the beginning of my career, I interviewed a distinguished editor for some reason dressed for the occasion in a cream suit, like Tom Wolfe, who told me he'd been at his paper for decades and couldn't leave. 'It's like a bad marriage,' he told me, 'the longer it goes on, the more difficult it is to end.'
It strikes me you are similarly frozen by dysfunction to take action beyond your cry of pain, and you should seriously consider ending or 'opening' the marriage. There's tons to read on this: Maxine Aston has written extensively in her mission to help couples where there is autism, Asperger's etc, in the mix and has produced workbooks that you and your husband, if you are so minded, can complete together. She has written half a dozen books with titles like Asperger's in Love which might help. Laybourne also says you could add Terrence Real's The New Rules of Marriage to your reading list. Lots of homework I suggest before you take any next steps.
Dear Rachel,
I am 79 and, although I live life to the full, I've gone off intimacy with my husband – but I wouldn't want anyone else. He is my second one after a complicated divorce, and I hardly see anyone but my grown-up adult children. I am content but I feel empty. Can you advise?
– Anon
Dear Anon,
I've decided to ignore your age which you tell us and answer this letter as if it's not a factor here. As it happens, I'm listening to William Boyd's Desert Island Discs and he's just explained his theory of life which I will pass on as it's worth hearing.
It's a version of carpe diem as these things tend to be. He says you should go through each day as if you are walking on thin ice, so at any moment you can plunge into the dark freezing depths and you might never come back. Try to bear that in mind and the savour of merely being alive and immersed in what the author calls the 'cinema of the world' could steal back into your everyday, even if you are not having it all in your marriage. We don't (or shouldn't) need Boyd to remind us that time is the most precious resource any of us have, and no matter how much sex or success or money or fun we can squeeze into our little lives, they are all rounded off with a sleep.
To your letter, though. You feel empty, you say. You don't want sex with your husband but you don't want sex with anyone else. Perhaps this isn't about sex, then, but boredom? An absence of purpose after two marriages and raising children? I am going to make some obvious suggestions based on other people I know your age who are living contented lives. Start a book group or hobby such as embroidering kneelers for your church (I'm not joking, I'll never forget Tracey Emin once telling me that needlework was a substitute for masturbation). Volunteer, as the best way to instantly feel more cheerful about yourself is to do something for someone else. Join the Mother's Union or Women's Institute. Start making marmalade. Plan ahead. Cook. Travel. Read. Listen to music. Plant a garden, and watch it bloom and then brown. Accept the cycle of change and decay, and carpe diem!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scotland's overall best universities, as students prepare for SQA results day
Scotland's overall best universities, as students prepare for SQA results day

Scotsman

time15 hours ago

  • Scotsman

Scotland's overall best universities, as students prepare for SQA results day

Across Scotland, thousands of students will soon be opening their exam results - and starting to make a solid plan for what will come next. SQA results day is now just days away, falling on Tuesday, August 5 this year. As Highers results roll in, so too will the outcomes of conditional university offers, for the many students hoping to use them as a springboard to launch themselves into the next step of their academic journey. Others, including those who applied after the deadline and those who didn't get the grades they might have hoped, will have another shot at being matched up with a university that works for them through the Clearing process. Fortunately for them, Scotland has no shortage of excellent universities, even when compared to others across the UK. With results day in mind, we've revisited The Guardian's latest university league table for 2025. This prestigious ranking gives most of the UK's 160-odd universities an overall score out of 100 based on a range of different metrics, including current student's satisfaction with both teaching and feedback, the school's staff-to-student ratio, how much money the institution spends per student, the average UCAS entry score for new starters, the percentage of first year students continuing on to their second year of study - and even graduate career prospects. We looked at how each of Scotland's universities fared, to create a useful guide for this year's upcoming cohort of university students. Our list is limited to institutions that achieved a score of more than 50 out of 100, according to The Guardian's metric. It is worth noting, however, that a few schools didn't appear in the overall rankings, which the paper says is due to not enough data being available. It's also important to remember that a low score overall doesn't mean that a university won't be a good place for you to study. Rankings can jump around year-on-year based on factors like extra funding - and even universities with lower overall rankings will often rank very highly for specific courses. Here were the Scottish universities that made the cut: 1 . University of St Andrews Taking out Scotland's top spot for 2025, this prestigious institution in St Andrews, Fife, is Scotland's oldest university - and is also thought to also be one of the oldest English-speaking universities in the world. It was ranked 2nd overall across the UK, with The Guardian giving it an exceptional score of 98.6 out of 100. | Peter Thompson/Photo Sales 2 . University of Aberdeen Another historic university, Aberdeen came in second place for Scotland, and was ranked 12th overall in the UK. The Guardian gave it a score of 73.3 out of 100. | UoA/Supplied Photo Sales 3 . University of Glasgow The University of Glasgow is Scotland's third highest-ranking university. It ranked 14th overall across the UK, with The Guardian giving it a score of 68.9 out of 100. | Fabian Bleh/Wirestock Creators/Adobe Stock Photo Sales 4 . University of Edinburgh Just behind it came the capital's namesake institution, which was ranked 15th overall in the UK. The Guardian gave it a score of 68.4 out of 100. | Adobe Stock Photo Sales

13 photos which tell story of Glasgow school and its famous ex-pupils
13 photos which tell story of Glasgow school and its famous ex-pupils

Glasgow Times

time2 days ago

  • Glasgow Times

13 photos which tell story of Glasgow school and its famous ex-pupils

Famous ex-pupils of Whitehill Secondary in Dennistoun include leading lights of stage and screen, medicine, science and sport. The school opened in 1891 on Whitehill Street, replacing a building which had once housed the private school Dennistoun Academy, later renamed Whitehill Public School for Girls. Whitehill Secondary in the 1970s (Image: Glasgow City Archives) The first headmaster was James Henderson. In 1902, Whitehill became a Higher Grade school and in 1967 it became a comprehensive. In 1977, the school moved to its present site on Onslow Drive and the original building was demolished. (Image: Newsquest) In 2009, YDance officially launched its Free To Dance Project at Whitehill Secondary in a bid to encourage girls to get involved in dancing as an alternative to PE and other sports. A group of teenage pupils involved in the project treated fellow students to a performance. (Image: Newsquest) In June 1971, the principal prizewinners accepted their accolades – left to right, Brian Williams, 16; George Smith, 16; Fiona McIvor, 18; Ian Raitt, 17; Robert Livingston, 16; Robert Walker, 16; and Bashir Mohammed, 18. (Image: Iain Munro) Times Past reader Iain Munro shared photos of the old Whitehill Senior Secondary school magazine recently. Iain went to Whitehill from 1959 until 1963. READ NEXT: 'At the time, I lived in Riddrie with my parents, in close proximity to Barlinnie jail where my dad worked as a prison officer, and I travelled to and from Dennistoun by public transport, usually the 106 trolleybus,' says Iain, who now lives in the Wirral on Merseyside. 'The magazines are a fascinating reminder of my time at Whitehill.' (Image: Newsquest) Glasgow's first female Lord Provost Jean Roberts, pictured here with Princess Margaret, was a pupil at Whitehill. Trailblazer Jean was also the first woman to become convener of the electricity committee, first to be deputy chairman of the corporation, first to be city treasurer, and the first to be leader of the Labour group. After school, she initially trained as a teacher, and worked at Bishop Street Elementary School. (Image: Newsquest) Senior pupils in 2011 arrive by stretch limo for the Whitehill school prom. It was the early days of US-style high school proms becoming more popular in the city. (Image: Newsquest) Marie McDonald McLaughlin Lawrie, who was born in Dennistoun in 1948, was always getting into trouble for singing during lessons at Whitehill Secondary. It paid off, however, as Marie became global singing superstar Lulu, with a string of hits to her name. (Image: Newsquest) In the 1950s, girls and boys still studied different subjects at high school. This domestic science class in 1952 was just for the girls, while the boys studied technical courses such as woodwork. (Image: Newsquest) Artist and author Alasdair Gray was a pupil at Whitehill Secondary, where he received prizes for art and English. He attended Glasgow School of Art from 1952 to 1957 and went on to make his living from writing, painting and teaching. (Image: Newsquest) Rangers and Aberdeen footballer Jim Forrest, who died in 2023 aged 79, was born in Townhead and educated at Rosemount Primary School in Royston and Whitehill Secondary School in Onslow Drive, Dennistoun. (Image: Newsquest) Ronald Cresswell, who died in 2021 aged 86, was a Scottish scientist who was at the forefront of the development of several groundbreaking drugs, including AZT, which is used to prevent and treat HIV. His initial interest was history but it was one of his teachers at Whitehill Secondary who got him interested in chemistry. Ronald also developed the statin, Lipitor, which helps reduce cholesterol. It was once the best selling drug in the world. (Image: Newsquest) Barry St John, who died in 2020 at the age of 76, was a famous backing singer for the likes of John Lennon, Pink Floyd and Elton John in the 1970s. She was born Eliza Janet Thomson in the Gallowgate and went to Whitehill Secondary School in Dennistoun. She is pictured here with American DJ Emperor Rosko in November 1968, the year he signed her. (Image: Newsquest) Dr June Almeida, pictured here at an electron microscope, was a pioneer of medicine, whose work led to the identification of the first human coronavirus. Some of the techniques used in the 2020 pandemic hark back to her work in the 1950s. She was born in 1930 and lived in a tenement near Alexandra Park. Her interest in biological science was sparked by the sad death from diphtheria of her six-year-old brother in 1940. June won the science prize at Whitehill Secondary School, but had to leave school in 1947, the family having no funds to send her to university. She went to work as a laboratory technician in Glasgow Royal Infirmary, which enabled her to study the microscopic examination of tissue samples at which she excelled.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store