NLDline
Tips for an NLD Spouse
by Charlotte Riggle
*Talk* to your spouse! Put what you want, how you
feel, what you love about him in *words*. That affectionate glance might not mean
anything to someone with NLD. Hints that you drop will be left there lying on the
floor. If you want your NLD spouse to know something, SAY it!
Similarly, avoid teasing. People with NLD have trouble figuring it out when you say one
thing and mean another. So if you say something with a smile or a giggle, assuming your
partner is going to know that you meant just the
opposite -- it won't work. You're going to hurt feelings if you do that.
*Listen* to what your partner says when he tells you what he needs. Take his word for it.
That's good advice for anyone, I think, but it's especially important for someone with a
disability. For example, I get lost really easily. If I've been from point A to
point B a jillion times, and from point A to point C at least as often, that does *not*
mean that I'm going to have any idea how to get from point B to point C. My husband, who
seems to have a built-in connection to the Global Positioning System, has trouble
understanding that. But when I need to go somewhere, he's happy to give me clear,
simple directions, starting from wherever I am. Of course, there were a few times
when we were first married that he gave me directions starting from some point half-way
there that he figured I could get to that were absolute disasters! But he understands what
I need now, and he does it.
Keep a sense of humor. If he's upset about something stupid he did because of the
NLD, reassure him *with words* that you know how he feels, but that you're not
upset, that it's no big deal, that you don't think he's incompetent or stupid.