Completely agree. Go to therapy OP. |
No. In a nutshell. You do NOT pounce on someone coming home from drinks with friends. That is NEVER the time to confront someone (about a rather stupid issue too, to be honest). Here's her M.O.: Poke, Poke, Poke. Poke. Get yelled at. Cry. Come here to complain about husband. Rinse, repeat. |
Well she could have yelled at him first. Just because you are a woman does not mean you can not be the abuser. |
|
+1. This is OP’s M.O. Her husband dares to go have fun without her, and she retaliates by making him feel like shit the moment he walks though the door, then continuing to provoke him unless he reacts, at which he point she cries and paints herself as the victim. |
She is. DH goes out, has fun with friend. The minute he comes home, OP is ready to lunge at him for some long standing issue. He retreats, and she follows, needling until her explodes. Then she cries and plays victim. IIRC the “monster” thread went much the same way, except he was out with his parents. I wonder why OP isn’t invited out or doesn’t participate in these outside engagements? |
Ha.. second 1141.. jinx, PP! WE’ve read this the same way. |
| What was your childhood like? |
1) I'm definitely not OP. 2) I was pretty careful in my post to note say "wife" or "husband" or "woman" or "man" so any suggestion that the OP is absolved because she's a woman is ridiculous and not responsive to what I wrote. 3) I agree that OP should have made the decision to not engage with her husband after he responded poorly when she first complained, if only because I personally think that no conversation about serious life matters should occur while either party is intoxicated. However, OP's husband's behavior is also terrible. Threatened to beat his head on the wall? Screamed at her? Then pretended that nothing happened? What an immature person. OP does not sound MORE mature, but that doesn't make her husband's behavior acceptable. |
Okay, I just want to comment on point 3. Have you never been pushed and pushed and pushed to the point that you actually feel like bashing your head into a wall might be the easier solution? From her own post, OP couldn’t let this go, and as you’ve already said, cornering your partner after a night of fun and drinking isn’t the time. He tried SEVERAL times to disengage, even based on OPs story (which tells me it was probably more times). So yeah, I get his response. It’s not the healthiest, but man... if someone is chasing you down REPEATEDLY for an answer that has been resolved, and not appropriate to changing at the time, then Many people may also express such frustration. As far as “nothing happened”, I’m guessing this is a frequent cycle and dynamic with them. |
Many people express frustration problematically. Many people have crappy dynamics in their relationships. That things occur frequently does not make them okay. I think it's immature to pretend as though nothing happened. It does not make the OP's husband look good. |
At least twice at week it seems... |
How often have you pounced on him with this topic while you are in a pissy mood. I suspect you want out, but need to vilify him first to make it more justifiable. |
|
OP, you are a habitual whiner, and even DCUM is tired of your complaining.
I can't even imagine how it is like to live with you as your DH. |
yes, because your relationship is defined by what others do in theirs. That's a fast-track to unhappiness and divorce. |