L
Lou2U
Guest
Xantippe and Pensmama’s advice is excellent. Your husband can’t keep running away and burying his head in the sand when he doesn’t like something. Still get a sitter and go to counseling - maybe if he sees you won’t back down, he’ll realise something has to change.Yes, I’ve gotten used to disproportionate reactions from him. He’s usually a VERY calm, good-humored and easygoing guy, but when he does snap, it’s bad. He fights dirty but yes, that’s just the way he grew up and learned to do it. I’m not saying it’s “ok” or anything, obviously I wish it were different. But I understand why he reacted that way. Because he feels like I’m telling him that what he’s doing isn’t good enough, that he’s not good enough. Now, that’s not the way I would have taken it, but I can see how he took it that way. He tends to take my words and read into them and latch on to his perspective without trying to understand what I’m actually saying. So when I told him things aren’t working for me and I need some help, he took it as a personal attack on him. He brought up every nice thing he’s ever done for me and felt like I was discounting all of that. Even if I told him otherwise, he wasn’t able to hear me anymore. He got his feelings hurt first thing and then totally engaged his emotions with no more rational thought. So it makes sense that if he was believing the thoughts he was telling himself, then he would react so strongly. He translated my words into, “You’re worthless, you’ve never done anything right in our marriage, I expect you do everything for me and I’m just going to take from now on.” If I’d said that, his reaction wouldn’t have been as disproportionate, and it doesn’t matter what I actually said if that’s what he heard.
And I admit that, even though I stayed completely calm and didn’t yell or cry or lecture, I refused to walk away. I know this drives him crazy but when we don’t resolve a conflict, he literally forgets about it and acts like nothing ever happened. I know I won’t see him the rest of the week because of work, and then basically all this “blows over” and he sees no problem. So I bring it up again and the same cycle repeats. This pattern has happened countless times in our marriage. We never actually move into the resolution phase. I’m sick of it so I kind of cornered him and refused to let it go. Not thatt that helped either. The counselor told us years ago that when he needs a break to cool down in an argument, that’s fine but he needs to come up with a day/time that he promises to come back and address it. And last night he point blank told me he wasn’t going to come back to it because the solution is just for me to deal with it.
Lou