Marriage and Neurodivergence: An Untold Love Story

January 22, 2025

Neurodivergent Marriage

For a long time, whenever I searched for articles about neurodivergent marriages, I found the same thing over and over again: lists of challenges. Warnings. Cautionary tales.

Some of it was useful. Much of it was heavy. And almost all of it left me asking the quiet, aching question so many of us eventually ask:

Is this kind of marriage even possible?

Fifteen years later, I know the answer.

Yes—it is possible. And not only that, it can become one of the most meaningful, transformative experiences of your life.

Here’s what I’ve learned from loving within neurodivergence.

Happiness Doesn’t Have One Shape

Happiness isn’t a template. It doesn’t come in a single form, follow a single script, or look the same in every home.

Being married to someone who experiences the world differently has forced me to confront my own rigid, black-and-white ideas about what marriage should be—and to let them go. When I did, something remarkable happened: I realized how much I already had.

The grass isn’t greener on the other side. It’s greener where you stop comparing.

Life doesn’t need to follow a prescribed construct to be beautiful. It can be messy. It can be unconventional. It can be deeply joyful. When you release expectations and focus instead on what is, you make room for appreciation—and appreciation changes everything.

Love Grows Where Acceptance Lives

You can choose to focus on the things you don’t like about your partner. You can choose to react to every difference, every misstep, every unmet expectation.

But that path leads nowhere.

People don’t change because they’re criticized or made to feel inadequate. They change when they feel safe. When they feel loved. When they feel accepted, supported, and truly heard.

On our hardest days, that’s all any of us want . Someone who listens without judgment. Someone who doesn’t rush to fix us. Someone who lets us arrive at our own insights, in our own time.

Acceptance is powerful. Acceptance is healing. Acceptance is love in its most practical form.

Marriage Can Be a Refuge

Life is hard. People can be unkind. The world asks too much of us far too often.

Marriage doesn’t have to add to that weight.

The best marriages are a refuge—a place where two people can unmask, exhale, and give each other grace. A place where not everything is taken personally, because not everything is personal.

So often, people are simply reacting to their own hurt. When we learn to see past that, we stop jumping to conclusions and start listening instead. And listening—real listening—changes the tone of everything.

There Is Beauty in Being Different

Life is precious. And being a little awkward, a little unconventional, a little different is not a flaw, it’s a feature.

Why do we cling so tightly to social norms about what marriage should look like? Why not build the marriage that actually fits us?

There is beauty in awkwardness. There is freedom in authenticity. There is joy in choosing each other on your own terms—not anyone else’s.

The Choice That Makes It Worth It

These lessons have made me stronger, kinder, and more empathetic than I ever thought I could be.

And yes, while neurodivergent marriages can be challenging, they are also profoundly worthwhile.

Marriage is not just a feeling. Feelings come and go.Marriage is a choice. A commitment. A daily decision to see differently, love deeper, and grow together.

And when you shift your perspective—when you truly embrace difference instead of resisting it—marriage can become one of the most beautiful things in the world.

Lyubov Abrams is a Certified Relationship Coach at The Marriage Place who specializes in neurodivergent relationships. She has a degree in psychology from Georgia State University, completed advanced training in relationship coaching from the Center of Thriving Relationships, and holds special certification in neurodiverse/neurodivergent (ADHD, autism) relationships. Lyubov shares her life with her husband, 3 kids, and a dog. In her free time, she enjoys spending time with loved ones, volunteering, and writing.

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