Hi. I've been away from the forum for some months (computer access problems). While away, I discovered that I have Asperger's Syndrome. This discovery has been shedding light (real light!) on some of the most mysterious aspects of my traumatic experience. I am just beginning to see how autistic characteristics made it possible for me to be shockingly and repeatedly assaulted for more than a decade in the same way and by the same person, over and over and over again, despite the fact that the assaults began when I was 29 years old, I had had no history of abuse, I'd had reasonably solid self-esteem, and so on.
This is all so new to me that I don't yet feel like I can be clear about it, but I do want to ask whether anyone knows of some useful literature on the combination of autism and PTSD. There's lots of material on what makes the autistic more vulnerable to violence but less on how their subjection to violence can lead more easily to traumatic reactions (e.g., dissociation), why they are characteristically bad at self-defense and and therefore at extricating themselves from even the most profoundly damaging "relationships," how autism changes self-help and therapy for sufferers of PTSD, whether there are support groups or online groups that serve those with both autism and PTSD, who the experts are at this intersection of illnesses, and so on.
Any thoughts would be very welcome.
This is all so new to me that I don't yet feel like I can be clear about it, but I do want to ask whether anyone knows of some useful literature on the combination of autism and PTSD. There's lots of material on what makes the autistic more vulnerable to violence but less on how their subjection to violence can lead more easily to traumatic reactions (e.g., dissociation), why they are characteristically bad at self-defense and and therefore at extricating themselves from even the most profoundly damaging "relationships," how autism changes self-help and therapy for sufferers of PTSD, whether there are support groups or online groups that serve those with both autism and PTSD, who the experts are at this intersection of illnesses, and so on.
Any thoughts would be very welcome.