Yes, I've said it two or three times. "If you keep calling me that, it's is going to be the reason we break up." Things like that. I feel like I've been clear that I don't want to be called Ria, and that it's a big deal to me. I don't say it jokingly. |
I guess I find this so not believable that someone a) calls you a name you don't like, b) after you vehemently and seriously telling him to stop. I think it's prob not necessarily disrespect but just cluelessness. Not reading the cues that it's not cute. My DH is a little like this. But he really isn't disrespectful. He just doesn't understand why people don't think like him on certain things. I'll also say, if everything else is good (and sounds like it's not by your first part of the post), it would be strange to break up over this. This is something that would be mildly annoying to me but nothing more than that. |
Yeah, if you’ve thought through it to this extent, you are done with him. Not a bad reason to break up, I think. You’re not into him and he’s annoying you. |
| You can breakup with him over whatever you want… 🤦♂️ |
NP. It seems you and your DH are well suited. Typically, when a SO explicitly and repeatedly asks you not to do something that directly affects them, the SO stops doing it out of respect for the feelings/wishes of their loved one. No 'cues' are needed since the statement is clear and explicit. Continuing to ignore the reasonable requests of a loved one is a relationship killer. If you see the warning signs, best to stop before you drive off the cliff. |
DP. Do you really want to be with someone who only modifies their behavior because of a threat/consequence? His continued use of a name for you that you have indicated you don't like and told him to stop using is an indication of his contempt - that how he feels about something is more important than how you feel. If he continues to do it because he thinks it's cute, it's, again, an indication of his lack of respect for you. His disregard of your discomfort in pursuit of his pleasure is a huge red flag that will show up in many other aspects of your relationship. This is also a small form of manipulation/conditioning. He continues to cross a boundary you have establish (but you don't appear to have maintained it since you seem to respond to him when he uses it). It's a small, but significant boundary. He's conditioning you to accept future boundary violations. Will the gifts he buys you start being things he wants rather than what you want? If you want him to get X from the grocery but he gets Y because he doesn't think X is really what you want? What other choices of yours will he start whittling away at? |
WTF? No. No woman should sign up for life with a man who won't do things (especially such a small simple thing) unless threatened. No woman should be consigned to a life if constantly threatening "one more chance". OP, your name is part of your core identity. Your husband is sending you an implicit method that he gets to decide what that is not you. Also, women can break up with men for any reason or no reason at all. You can decide "today is Tuesday, I'm breaking up with you." The idea that we have to have a "good enough" reason rests on the notion that men are owed a relationship with a woman unless they do something bad enough. Obligatory relationships are not consensual. |
Abuse starts by testing seemingly insignificant boundaries. As you sink more time into the relationship and engage in behavior that makes it harder to leave (say I love you, live together, combine finances, get engaged, get married, get pregnant, buy a house quit a job to SAHM, etc. the boundary testing increases. That is how women find themselves in abusive relationships, bit by bit. I wish I had learned this much earlier in my life. |
| run |
| Break up with him because he’s not doing it for you. That’s all the reason you need. Dating is like trying on shoes. If they don’t fit, don’t keep them. |
| You can break up with a guy for any reason. You don’t need a reason. If you aren’t enjoying the relationship, you can leave. |
No, not crazy. Huge red flag. Disrespect and gaslighting. Move on to find your Tony, Maria. |
He's passive aggressive Ria.
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| OP here. I broke up with him. He seemed stunned. I reminded him that several times I'd said my full name was important to me. Now that it's a few days later I don't regret my decision but also don't feel good about it. |
It’s hard to feel good about dumping someone, but that doesn’t mean it wasn’t right. You wouldn’t have get good about being called the wrong name your whole life either. |