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An Open Letter to Marriage Therapists, Pastors, and Biblical Counselors

  • dan1852
  • 10 hours ago
  • 3 min read

Author:  Barbara Grant, MMFT, NDCC, CAS, with the input of many neurotypical wives)


Dear Faith Leaders and Marriage Helpers,


We write to you with respect and gratitude for your heart to help struggling couples. Yet many Christian women in neurodiverse marriages—where one partner is autistic or has

ADHD—have suffered further harm under well-intentioned but uninformed guidance. Our hope is this letter opens eyes, hearts, and conversations toward more compassionate and effective Care.


Neurodiverse marriage dynamics differ significantly from those of typical marriages. What appears as stubbornness, coldness, or selfishness may instead be a neurological difference—difficulty with executive function, empathy expression, or emotional regulation. These challenges require psychoeducation and specialized skill-building, not only prayer and Scripture. While faith is central to healing, a scripture-and-prayer approach alone cannot bridge neurological communication gaps or repair trauma patterns that form over years of misunderstanding.


In many churches, complementarian teaching further complicates things. The call for husbands to “lead” and wives to “submit” may not fit a neurodiverse marriage, where the husband may struggle to plan, initiate, or sustain an emotional connection. Wives, often neurotypical, are urged to “do more,” “forgive more,” or “offer more intimacy” while receiving no emotional nourishment in return. This spiritualizes her exhaustion and deepens her trauma.


Many neurotypical wives come to you depleted—after years of over-functioning and being

blamed for the marriage’s failures. They are told their pain stems from bitterness or lack of

submission, rather than from chronic emotional neglect, isolation, or hidden abuse. Some

neurodiverse husbands cope through pornography or escapist addictions that remain

unaddressed in Christian counseling.


Without neurodiversity-informed training, pastoral or marital advice can unintentionally re-

traumatize those already suffering. Encouraging more sex in a relationship where emotional

safety is absent can feel like a violation. Urging a woman to stay, rather than setting healthy

boundaries or separating for safety, can perpetuate harm. Abuse—including emotional, financial, verbal, sexual, and physical—should be recognized as legitimate grounds for separation or divorce. Divorce should not be labeled as sin when it protects life and dignity.

Formal diagnosis is often costly or unavailable; self-diagnosis and a wife’s lived experience

should be considered valid indicators of neurodiversity. Masking—the ability of neurodiverse

individuals to appear “normal” in public—can deceive even experienced helpers. Please listen closely to the wife’s detailed testimony of what happens at home; it may reveal patterns you cannot see in session.


Effective help begins with humility: recognizing that neurodiverse couples require different

coaching, therapy methods, and timelines. Traditional marriage models without neurodiverse training  (Gottman, EFT, Imago (IFS) are often ineffective. Instead, family-systems, trauma-informed, and skills-based models such as Solution-Focused Brief Therapy (SFBT), combined with separate counseling and supplemental supports (addiction recovery, trauma therapy, medication, resilience support, nutrition, and sleep care), often bring better results.


Faith-based marriage helpers are urged to:

  • Become educated about ASD/ADHD and their marital impacts.

  • Validate both partners’ trauma and confusion.

  • Recognize that neurodiverse couples are not neurotypical couples.

  • Avoid simplistic spiritual prescriptions that deepen shame or harm.

  • Support separation or divorce when safety, sanity, or healing require it.

  • Please, learn with us. Your wisdom, combined with accurate knowledge of neurodiversity, can transform despair into understanding and give these couples—and their children—a genuine chance to heal in Christlike love.

  • With sincere hope and respect,

  • Women in Neurodiverse Marriages


Recommended reading:

Uniquely Us: Gracefully Navigating the Maze of Neurodiverse Marriage

Emotionally Destructive Marriage: How to Find Your Voice and Reclaim Your Hope

The Life-Saving Divorce: Hope for People Leaving Destructive Relationships


Couples, Individuals, want to work with Barbara Grant:

 
 
 

©2021-2025 by The International Association of NeuroDiverse Christian Marriages

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