
ABBEY ROMEO and David ISAACMAN dream one day, but “Love on the Special” stars are not in a hurry to link the knot.
“We already feel that we are married from the inside,” I tell Abbey, 26 years old, Today.com.
“We are not ready to do the real thing yet,” David, 30, adds.
At the present time, the couple simply enjoys a company and prepares to celebrate the fourth anniversary of this summer.
David says of his girlfriend: “I don’t only love her personality, but she is sweet like all my favorite sweets, and she is beautiful, funny, smart, beautiful and beautiful at the same time.”
It is an exciting time for lovebirds, who first met while appearing on “Love on the Spectrum”, which is the Netflix series that follows the dating life of people on the spectrum of autism.
When the show returns to its third season on April 2, viewers will see more crowded romance in ABBEY and David and follow a series of other chains, including Dani Bowman, Adán Correa, Connor Tomlinson, Tanner Smith and James Jones. They will also get to know two new sides this season: Madison Marilla and Barry Kim.
Since they admire the exhibitions, ABBEY and David are often recognized in public places. “I have fans wherever you go,” ABBEY notes.
She is far from the way the monastery was feeling in her childhood. “I used to feel isolated and only as a child, and I had a much lower language. I affected the unification more when I was a child. It could affect me, even as an adult. It affects me a little, but not much,” she says.
If you follow the ABBEY and David trip, then you know that their love seemed estimated in their first history, when they visited a center to learn wildlife in California. Soon they realized that they participated in the love of lions, and the relationship flourished from there.
When they were asked about the reason for both admiration for the king of the forest, the couple is on the same page. Abbey declares, “They are brave, and I love to be brave.”
“I too,” David agrees.
ABBEY and David took advantage of their courage when they participated in “Love on the Spectrum”, although they recognized tension when they started filming the show for the first time. In the end, the couple says that the experience changed their lives for the better.

As an adult woman, I feel acceptable to what I am now these days.
Disease control centers Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is determined as “a disability of growth resulting from the differences in the brain.” As “love on the spectrum” appears, each person suffers from autism in a different way, with accurate differences in its ability to communicate, interact and learn.
During its inception, ABBEY faced challenges with communication.
“The type of autism that I have is called autism disorder,” she explained. “(It took) 22 years of speech therapy, 15 years of professional therapy to reach where I am today to be able to speak like this.”
Meanwhile, David has Synesthesia, who Cleveland clinic It is defined as “a phenomenon that causes sensory transitions, such as tasting colors or feeling sounds.”
“She learns a specialist by seeing numbers as colors,” explains, explaining how to connect each number.
Abe says that David also supports her, especially when she faces unwanted sounds.
“When I hear a certain noise, like the crying in which he cries, it really hurts my ears. I have hearing problems,” says David about what he tells her whenever a child cries near her.
“Just ignore it and keep a distance. You have to remember that you should use noise canceling headphones,” David replies.
“Or you can cover my ears because I don’t want to hear it,” he adds ABBEY.

Nearly four years of dating, ABBEY and David developed some simple but solid tips to maintain romance alive.
“The secret of a good relationship is that we understand each other (and the way our minds work. We are cute and morning with each other and we are the real ourselves.”
David agrees and adds his advice, saying: “The secret of a great relationship is confidence, gathering your courage, being yourself and taking care of others as well.”
The couple became friends with many other former stars for “Love on the Special”, including Subodh Garg and Devin Morrissey, and they have some wise tips for anyone else with autism looking for love.
“Give someone a gift to remember him,” David suggests. “They must feel confident. Gather their courage and to be themselves by caring for others.”
In the end, Abbey says, everything is to communicate with the person you meet for the first time.
“You have to distinguish a common person with common things between them, and the same similar interests or interests,” she says.
Abbey and David have a lot of common denominators, such as their love for black and pizza, and they enjoy going at lunch.

“It makes me feel very good when we are together,” says David.
In the new season of “Love on The Spectrum”, Abbey sings a beautiful song I wrote to David. When I was asked about what she inspired to share her feelings in a song, Abe says, “This is because I always wanted a friend and now I have one.”
While thinking about the romantic moment, David says it is a special moment.
“He was very special, what I did for him. It is special with me,” says Abi.
If “Love on the Spectrum” is renewed for the fourth season, it will be the Lovebirds bird to return to get another set of episodes.
“I don’t know when it will be.”