
Cassandra Syndrome - 132 Signs and Symptoms
The Hidden Suffering of Women Who Marry Aspies, Schizoids, Narcissists and OCPD Men
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Narrado por:
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Tara Tyler
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De:
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J.B. Snow
Many listeners email me each day. They typically have problems with the men in their lives. The truth that most of them don't realize is that their emotionally unavailable man or narcissistic man has an undiagnosed syndrome, complex, or disorder. Men often don't seek diagnoses for these issues that have been an ingrained part of their personality since they were born. They want acceptance and a sense of belonging from their partners, and they are often as unable to get these things from his partner as she is unable to get emotional validation from him.
The disorders and complexes that these men have often range from schizotypal disorder to schizophrenia to Asperger's Syndrome to Autism Spectrum Disorder. The traits, signs, and symptoms of these disorders are often pervasive and elusive. No single set of traits can instantly diagnose someone who is on these spectrums. Their brains and their learning style are different, thus causing their partners great grief in trying to deal with them.
In interacting with these men, the women often suffer significant mental decline themselves. They are often put through verbal and emotional abuse. Their emotional needs are often not met by their partners. They fall into a depression, or they suffer from unrelenting anxiety about the relationship. They are never sure whether the relationship will thrive or fail. They are blamed by their family, partners, friends, and coworkers for the failure of the relationship. Everyone else often seems completely clueless as to why they are complaining. After all, their spouse generally seems to be responsible and hardworking.
Both partners are at a loss as to how to connect, bond, and interact with one another appropriately. If they do not know the source of their angst, they will continue to hurt each other, bicker, and argue to the point of tearing each other apart.
©2016 J.B. Snow (P)2016 J.B. SnowListeners also enjoyed...




















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Should be longer.
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I think the idea is sound and a list of traits could be helpful. But it was hard to tell what the traits were when mentioned. It needs to be rewritten with more explanations and transitional sentences. And also read with some pauses and emphasis.
I think I did learn about the Cassandra syndrome a bit. It was my intro to the idea, so probably not the best choice for that.
Hard to follow
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How much I related to the material
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Demonizes People with ASD
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Fundamental Problems
Pseudoscience Masquerading as Expertise: The author makes sweeping, unsupported claims about autism while demonstrating no credible expertise. Conflating autism with schizophrenia, narcissistic personality disorder, and other conditions reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of neurodevelopmental differences.
Systematic Dehumanization: This book portrays autistic people as inherently defective, manipulative, and incapable of genuine love or intimacy. Every normal autism trait—direct communication, need for routine, sensory sensitivities—gets reframed as abusive behavior causing trauma to partners.
Victim-Blaming Disguised as Support: While claiming to support struggling partners, the book actually prevents genuine relationship improvement by teaching readers to pathologize rather than accommodate neurological differences. Real solutions require understanding autism as a difference, not a disorder to be managed.
Specific Harmful Claims
Suggests autism traits cause "verbal and emotional abuse" (they don't)
Claims autistic people are inherently manipulative (we're typically more honest than average)
Positions normal autism accommodation needs as unreasonable demands
Uses clinical-sounding language to legitimize prejudice
The Real Damage
This book doesn't just fail to help relationships—it actively sabotages them. Partners who internalize these ideas will:
Reject legitimate accommodation requests as "enabling dysfunction"
Interpret direct communication as aggression
View their autistic partner's needs as character flaws requiring correction
Create hostile environments that force harmful masking behaviors
What This Actually Is
This isn't relationship advice—it's a guide for maintaining neurotypical supremacy in relationships while feeling justified about rejecting autism accommodation. The author profits from validating prejudice rather than promoting genuine understanding.
For Actual Help
If you're in a neurodiverse relationship, seek resources from actual autism experts and autistic advocates. Organizations like AANE (Asperger/Autism Network) provide evidence-based guidance that doesn't demonize either partner.
Skip this harmful book entirely. Your relationship deserves better than advice built on stigma, hate, and misunderstanding.
A Dangerous and Harmful Misrepresentation
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This audio "book" is a joke!
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