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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Partners fixations on things

29 replies

curiousfrogs · 28/10/2021 11:15

Hi I was just wondering what people's thoughts are on my partner and what seemingly is becoming an unhealthy obsession with a certain topic, and just his personality general.

Just as a side note, I love my DP so so much. He really is a wonderful human being, very loving and extremely attentive. Over the years i have been with him i have wondered whether he falls somewhat on the spectrum maybe, im not too sure what but i am pretty certain it aids for some sort of diagnosis but i just cant out my finger on it.

So he often gets fixated on certain things or topics - he is a very curious person, likes to 'know' things and research. The past few years its been certain fun topics such the universe, particularly the moon, gardening, birds, crystals, insects. Not uncommon interests and we have some with deep discussions often. Harmless things.

However, once he gets in fixation mode its like nothing can pull him away from it. in addition, he has other traits that seem to feed it as well, like poor time management and just general lack of acknowledgement about time altogether. he cannot seem to go from A to B and he gets distracted vey very easily, often with something he will get fixated on.

For example

Planning things are difficult with him. If we are out on a walk, and its a 2 hour route, I very much have to plan for 4-5 hours because he will often see something that interests him and he will stop and obsess over that one thing, will want to spend time with it, take loads of pictures and google it (god knows what his google history is like 😂) and it takes some mad effort for me to pull him from it. Not too much a problem except for we have been late back home many times for things that are important because he doesn't seem to understand a sense of rush. We have not eaten for hours or been miles away from home if its a trip out and it's very frequent we get back after midnight or 2am if we have a 'day' out. He does not like to plan things either which stresses me out a little because we have ended up stuck many times. We stopped to look at a bug once for almost two hours and as interesting as it was, I could not pull him away.

Another example

If he goes to the shop to get one item it's been common for him to be an hour or two because he's too distracted at everything he sees. It ends up him coming out 50 quid down a lot of the time.

Another

His lateness is frustrating. He drops the children off (two different schools) once every fortnight whilst I start work early but no matter how early he gets up he is always almost late. He cannot seem to understand to set off at a certain time even to get the girls to their school on time. I have to often step in and help the girls because he will forget to remind them to get ready as he's too busy doing something else, I literally have to put his dinner in his hands and guide him out of the door. This is after constantly reminding him of what time it is. It is often like he forgets that they need to be in school for 9, but he's forgetting every ten minutes. He is late for work I've noticed at least half of the week, if not more often.

He does have a busy mind most of the time, he interrupts a lot or if I'm telling him a story he will jump in and lead the conversation elsewhere, then on to something else, then something else until it's 20 minutes later and he will say 'I'm sorry what was you saying?' Or he forgets I started telling him something and the conversation just ends. If I try to bring him back he will snap (genuinely) apologise to me for leading me off track. Some times he will forget and do it again.

Anyway back to the fixation. Normally I can put up with it but this one is driving me up the wall. It's over a certain topic that is lingering and we cannot seem to have much conversation about him leading it on to this topic. These things are everywhere at the moment so if we are outside we can't really go ten minutes without seeing one and it leading on to it. I have tried to gently steer the conversation away from it but the force is very strong with this one, there is just no point so I just sit and listen. He's watching documentaries about them, reading books, getting friends involved. However, I am going through some personal family drama involving a certain type of these things which has been upsetting and I'm worried that he will drive himself in to danger zone with it and it's worrying me.

I have even tried to support him and get involved and dedicate a full day to this certain topic to see if it will get it out of his system a bit.

With the fixation and obsession traits, his busy mind and his complete lack of concept of time and plans, can I ask your opinions on what this could be? Please be kind. Its has crossed selfish territory a few times, especially when it comes to the girls if they get bored or hungry and I have called him out on it before. He is not a selfish person (usually) and I have experienced his behaviours now to understand that he does not do it with an intention to cause upset. I honestly feel like he does not 'understand' time sometimes or how long he will stop and go in to his head for. I know there's something very unusual about this, I have wondered whether he has ADHD with the chatty head and the distraction but the fixation thing doesn't quite fit in.

OP posts:
curiousfrogs · 28/10/2021 12:30

@GalaxyPostcard
@1MillionDollars

It's nice to know there is an option there, but at the same time I don't think I would want him medicated either. Not if it suppresses who he is.

I was on antipsychotics for some time and it crippled me. Suppressed my emotions, my creativity, the way I interacted with people, everything. It took years to get myself back to who I was and now I embrace it. It was hard to adapt to but I'm medication free now myself, and I take the hard as it comes. It's taken a good year years of putting plans and structure in place to make up for it. Practical things. Hard work but I wouldn't go back. I wouldn't want to be with anyone who wanted me back on those meds either!

I do not want that life for him. His curious nature and his love for the world and the unique way he sees it one of the many many reasons why I fell in love with him. I'd rather we lived with his obsessions and his beautiful weirdness if it means he can be himself, and we have to sacrifice other things and put practical things in place to support him instead. He would refuse them yes, that's his choice but I wouldn't blame him because I know I've been there and I did the same.

Not a life for many people to take on I understand that, but yes I can accept this. As long as he starts taking responsibility for his actions and we make the effort to meet in the middle somewhat because it's not fair all round if he doesn't start to take it seriously, especially with the girls.

I want to learn to understand it more and support him.

OP posts:
1MillionDollars · 28/10/2021 12:39

That's nice.

He has to meet you half way and I think that is the challenge. You don't want him to medicate, and you say you don't want to change who he is, but really you are asking him to change who he is, yes, for the benefit of you and the kids but nonetheless a hard change. He might not be able to help it.

I'm sure there are courses / training you both can do instead of medication, there was some training course my ex did for autism, cost a lot though.

Good luck. Some kind of action is needed for your on well being and I hope you can find something that works. There also might be natural remedies that help, depending what he has though. Autism it sounds like to me but I'm no doctor. Diagnosis maybe first step.

Shoxfordian · 28/10/2021 12:55

It sounds like you’re catering to him far too much at the expense of your children and their enjoyment

It’s lovely you think he has a beautiful mind but he just seems selfish. This is fine if you don’t have kids but you need to put them not him first

If he’s not going to medicate himself or change anything then you’re not going to resolve this

HarryBlackberry1 · 28/10/2021 16:09

Sounds like ASD. My adult dd has just been diagnosed, and she very much struggles with time management. Also, becomes fixated on things.

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