Episode 22: The Hidden Autism in Your Relationship with Kory Andreas

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Why late diagnosis of autism matters for relationships

When neurodivergence goes unseen, relationships often misread overwhelm as rejection, shutdown as indifference, and sensory overload as disconnection.

Intro

What if the issue in your relationship isn’t communication failure, lack of effort, or emotional distance—but undiagnosed autism, sensory overwhelm, or a nervous system trying to survive? In this deeply honest conversation, Emma Smith sits down with therapist and neurodivergence expert Kory Andreas to explore how late-diagnosed autism impacts intimacy, emotional connection, sex, masking, shame, and relationships.

Summary

In this deeply moving episode of The Intimate Philosopher, Dr. Emma sits down with therapist, writer, speaker, and neurodivergence specialist Kory Andreas for an honest conversation about autism, intimacy, authenticity, masking, and relationships.

Kory shares her own journey from unrecognized autism to becoming a leading voice in neuroaffirming care for late-diagnosed adults and neurodivergent couples. Together, Dr. Emma and Kory explore how autistic adults often experience sensory overload, exhaustion, misattunement, shame, and relationship strain—especially when their needs have gone unnamed for years.

They discuss how sex, sensory processing, emotional safety, nervous system regulation, direct communication, and reduced demands can dramatically reshape intimacy for neurodivergent couples.

This is a powerful episode about being seen, understood, and creating relationships built around collaboration rather than correction.

About Our Guest

About Kory Andreas

Kory Andreas is a therapist, writer, speaker, and neurodivergence specialist focused on supporting late-diagnosed autistic adults, neurodivergent couples, and high-maskers. Her work centers on neuroaffirming care, unmasking, emotional safety, and helping people understand how autism shapes relationships, identity, and intimacy.

In this episode, you’ll hear about:

  • Couples navigating autism in relationships
  • Adults questioning late-diagnosed autism
  • Women frequently mislabeled with anxiety, OCD, or personality disorders
  • Partners trying to understand sensory overwhelm and shutdown
  • Therapists working with neurodivergent individuals and couples
  • Anyone feeling “too much,” misunderstood, or exhausted from masking

If you’ve ever wondered whether what looks like disconnection may actually be nervous system protection, this episode may change the way you understand intimacy forever.

Episode Highlights

  • Late diagnosed autism in adults and why it’s often missed
  • Autism in women and high-maskers
  • Neurodivergence and intimacy challenges
  • Sensory overload during sex and physical touch
  • How autistic nervous systems experience overwhelm
  • Why many adults are misdiagnosed with anxiety, OCD, or personality disorders
  • Demand avoidance (PDA traits) in adult relationships Autism masking and emotional exhaustion
  • Why “self-care” often looks different for autistic adults
  • How direct communication improves neurodivergent relationships
  • Couples therapy mistakes when autism is overlooked
  • Unmasking and authenticity in intimate partnerships
  • Reframing resistance as protection rather than refusal
  • Neuroaffirming therapy and relationship support

Chapters

00:00 Introduction to Relational Shift Sessions
04:57 Understanding Bids for Connection
13:14 Types of Bids for Connection
22:38 Playfulness in Intimacy
27:59 Attunement and Closeness
34:05 Desire Forward Bids
38:29 Closing Thoughts and Future Directions


Key Reflections:

  • What appears like withdrawal may actually be nervous system overload.
  • Sensory overwhelm can deeply impact desire, sex, and physical intimacy.
  • Autism in women is still frequently overlooked or misunderstood.
  • Many adults labeled “difficult,” “too sensitive,” or “rigid” may actually be neurodivergent.
  • Masking often protects survival but can erode authenticity in relationships.
  • Demands can feel physiologically threatening for some autistic adults.
  • Intimacy often improves when partners move from blame to curiosity.
  • Direct communication can reduce relational misattunement.
  • Neurodivergent adults are often not resisting—they may be protecting capacity.
  • Emotional safety matters more than “normal” relationship scripts.

Why this converation matters:

Many couples spend years believing they are stuck in cycles of rejection, emotional disconnect, mismatched desire, or chronic misunderstanding—without realizing neurodivergence may be shaping the entire relationship dynamic.

When autism goes undiagnosed—especially in women, high-maskers, or adults who never fit stereotypical presentations—common relational struggles can be misinterpreted as selfishness, resistance, emotional withdrawal, or “not caring enough.”

In this powerful episode, Dr. Emma and Kory unpack how late-diagnosed autism, sensory overload, nervous system dysregulation, demand avoidance, masking, and neurodivergent communication differences can profoundly affect intimacy, sex, emotional safety, and partnership.

This conversation is especially important for:

  • Couples navigating autism in relationships
  • Adults questioning late-diagnosed autism
  • Women frequently mislabeled with anxiety, OCD, or personality disorders
  • Partners trying to understand sensory overwhelm and shutdown
  • Therapists working with neurodivergent individuals and couples
  • Anyone feeling “too much,” misunderstood, or exhausted from masking

If you’ve ever wondered whether what looks like disconnection may actually be nervous system protection, this episode may change the way you understand intimacy forever.


The Receipts

If you love when things get EXTRA nerdy, this section of the show notes is for you!

The Gottman Institute

The Relationship Cure by John and Julie Gottman

💌 Stay Connected

If this episode resonated with you, share it with a friend, send it to a parent of sons, or DM your thoughts on Instagram at @theintimatephilosopherpodcast or @emmasmithphd.

And if there is a topic you want covered on the show, Emma would love to hear from you.
Use our form below!

Send us a Question or Comment

Some of the best conversations begin with a question someone was almost afraid to ask. You’re welcome to ask it here.

Support for the Show

Support for the show is made possible with the help of Nine to Kind Planners. 

If you’ve heard me talk about the planner I actually use — it’s from Nine-to-Kind Therapist. It’s one of the few tools that helps me stay organized and grounded without feeling like another task to manage.
You can explore it here: https://ninetokind.com and use code EMMA20 for 20% off.

Keywords: relationships, intimacy, communication, bids for connection, emotional closeness, physical touch, attunement, desire, long-term relationships, relationship advice, sex therapy, emotional intimacy, healthy relationships, couples communication, improving intimacy, Gottman bids for connection

smoking chilli on fork

Episode 22: The Hidden Autism in Your Relationship with Kory Andreas

Sex, Sensory Overload, and Late Diagnosis with Kory Andreas

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