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Marriage can feel hard for so many reasons… and when you’re in a neurodivergent household, it can feel like there are extra layers you can’t always name.
In this solo episode, Greer shares a very honest snapshot of her marriage: she has ADHD, her husband is autistic, and they’re raising an autistic/ADHD child (with another little one whose “brain type” they’re still learning). She talks about the real stress points, the growth they’ve fought for, and the small “language tools” that have made communication feel safer and more doable.
Greer also opens up about a turning point from about five years ago—when she was close to leaving—and what helped them start repairing: individual counselling, marriage counselling, and learning how their brains work.
Why marriage can feel especially heavy in an ADHD/autism relationship
How miscommunication often comes from what wasn’t said (or how something landed)
The difference between being near each other… and actually feeling connected
Practical phrases that reduce conflict (like “10 minutes to dream” and “10-minute tap out”)
Why scheduling hard conversations can help neurodivergent nervous systems feel safer
How “survival seasons” can look like couch time—and why that can be okay (for a while)
A gentle reminder: you’re on the same team, and you’re not alone
If you’re in a season where it feels like you’re roommates, not partners—there’s no shame in that. You’re carrying a lot. This episode is your reminder that help is allowed, connection can be rebuilt, and sometimes the first step is simply finding words that work for your brains.
Learn about the Exhausted to Empowered Collective
Follow me on socials:
INSTAGRAM
FACEBOOK
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
By That Sounds Fun Network4.9
88 ratings
Marriage can feel hard for so many reasons… and when you’re in a neurodivergent household, it can feel like there are extra layers you can’t always name.
In this solo episode, Greer shares a very honest snapshot of her marriage: she has ADHD, her husband is autistic, and they’re raising an autistic/ADHD child (with another little one whose “brain type” they’re still learning). She talks about the real stress points, the growth they’ve fought for, and the small “language tools” that have made communication feel safer and more doable.
Greer also opens up about a turning point from about five years ago—when she was close to leaving—and what helped them start repairing: individual counselling, marriage counselling, and learning how their brains work.
Why marriage can feel especially heavy in an ADHD/autism relationship
How miscommunication often comes from what wasn’t said (or how something landed)
The difference between being near each other… and actually feeling connected
Practical phrases that reduce conflict (like “10 minutes to dream” and “10-minute tap out”)
Why scheduling hard conversations can help neurodivergent nervous systems feel safer
How “survival seasons” can look like couch time—and why that can be okay (for a while)
A gentle reminder: you’re on the same team, and you’re not alone
If you’re in a season where it feels like you’re roommates, not partners—there’s no shame in that. You’re carrying a lot. This episode is your reminder that help is allowed, connection can be rebuilt, and sometimes the first step is simply finding words that work for your brains.
Learn about the Exhausted to Empowered Collective
Follow me on socials:
INSTAGRAM
FACEBOOK
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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