Ok honey, you are in an abusive relationship and he is controlling you. You need a therapist of your own to help you safely get a divorce. That's super duper f*cked up behavior. |
Agree. That is abuse and super unhealthy. It's not okay for him to have a fit over something normal like being on his own with the kids for a few hours straight. A healthy functioning parent is able to handle that. Start documenting his behavior and saving money. His controlling behavior is a much bigger deal than him taking time off. You're missing the point by focusing on his time off. |
You love being a doormat/martyr who needs to be "needed," don't you? Wow. I'm headed to Florida at the end of the month with my college girlfriends. If the phone rang on the way to the airport because DH "needed" me, I'd laugh gleefully, hang up, and proceed with my plans. Don't want to be treated like a doormat? Don't lie down and allow yourself to be walked all over. Don't ask, tell. TELL him you booked a spa weekend the second week of February. Give him a rough overview of anything big happening that weekend (dance class at 10:30 on Saturday, dance bag is at the top of DD1's closet; Jason's birthday party is at 11 on Sunday morning at Rollie Pollies; don't forget that Caleb has to wear socks in order to play, wrapped gift is on the top shelf of my closet), then GO. |
| Either he has depression and it's manifesting as avoidance and anger (common in men) or he's an abuser and you'll have to get a divorce. |
Snerk. |
WOWWWWW you are a doormat. Grow a spine. |
Yep. He's married to someone else, or having an affair. |
| You both need therapy. |
+1 |
+1 Does he have kids from his previous marriage? |
| Thanks for the feedback. I am going to insist on a sitter and schedule a weekend away. |
OP if this were to happen, this should be a red flag for your parents that there's something wrong with your DH (not you). |
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My DH was similar when our only child was younger. He would go off to play golf or whatever for a full day, but if I went to run some errand by myself he’d be constantly calling me asking when I would be home. I think it was due to two reasons: 1. He’d rather be relaxing or doing whatever he wanted to do rather than dealing with an infant, toddler or preschooler. 2. Insecurity and not thinking he could handle things on his own.
He would try to pin me down to a time when I’d return and would get annoyed when I wouldn’t tell him an exact time or didn’t arrive home by that exact time. I finally told him I wouldn’t give him a time just to appease him and he could deal. He also would call my parents and ask them to watch DS if I had plans so that I didn’t get time away and he didn’t. He got plenty of time off—he just would think if I was “off” then he should be off too. It has gotten better as DS has gotten older and much more independent. DH is still very tit for tat and counts beans. If I have a girls night then he’s on the phone that evening planning his next outing. We have a group of friends and trade off guys trips and girls trips with a few couples trips as well. I’m more of a homebody so as long as I get to do what I want to do when it’s important to me then I don’t really care what DH does. It is a bad dynamic and you can’t let him take advantage of you because he will. He’s probably overwhelmed and would prefer to not deal with it so he just expects you to deal with it. It’s a big part of the reason we didn’t have another kid. |
| My husband used to say this. I used to tell him janitors, teachers, restaurant servers and other people that work Lowe paying jobs work hard as well and they might deserve a BMW or weekend travel (or whatever it was that he wanted at the time) but didn’t get to have it. Lots of people work hard and we all deserve a place to live and food on the table. That usually shut him up. He doesn’t say that anymore. |
Wait. You are in an abusive relationship. This is way worse than you initially made it seem. You need a professional therapist to help you get out. |