This is why your relationships aren’t working:
Because nobody taught you how to be loved in a way that actually works for your brain. So now you’re out here thinking: * needing clarity means you’re “too much” * needing space means you’re “cold” * struggling with tone means you’re “mean” * missing cues means you “don’t care” * getting overstimulated means you’re “dramatic” And after hearing that enough, you start doing one of two things: You either overexplain yourself to death… or shut down completely. A lot of neurodivergent relationships don’t fail because there isn’t love. They fail because there’s too much misunderstanding, too many unspoken needs, too much shame, and not enough language for what’s actually happening. You’re not impossible to love. You may just need communication that is clearer, safer, more direct, and less rooted in assumption. Because “you should just know” has ruined a lot of relationships. And so has expecting a neurodivergent person to keep performing comfort, eye contact, timing, tone, and emotional expression in a way that makes other people comfortable. That’s exhausting. And eventually, it breaks connection. The problem is not always the relationship. Sometimes the problem is trying to force neurotypical rules onto a neurodivergent nervous system. Whew.