Hand raised as well! |
OP. the sad reality of my marriage is that my empathy allowed my XH to take advantage of me. Does he give you the same consideration you give him? Or any consideration at all? |
Oh, get a life. It's a phrase. I hope you're not this nitpicky in real life. Go back to knitting your little punk hats and participating in goofy marches that no one cares about. |
It's THEN. You should take some lessons in grammar so that your future diatribes are properly written. |
Wow....just wow. Next time instead of waiting for 4 hours use your words. |
NP here. I think the bottom line is consideration and communication from both OP and DH. My take if we don't have kid and this isn't a situation where HH is every night at the expense of us spending time together, I would ask "should I hold dinner until X time"? Picking a time when I won't be ready to gnaw off my arm with hunger. I would expect him to say no if he knows for certain he will stay later or wants the freedom to stay longer, knowing he will need to figure out his own dinner if he doesn't. It is strictly for planning purposes, not that I will be upset either way. For time home, again, I might ask, what time do you think you will be home. More so that I know when to think there is a problem or possibly if it's worth waiting up. I think both things are a consideration thing when you are living with someone and eat meals together . If someone doesn't offer the info (which they may not think to do) don't be afraid to ask. |
there's a middle ground. in my family it would be like this:
spouse A--hey, do you mind if I go to HH? spouse B--sure, fine, should I wait for dinner for you? Spouse a-yes, I'll be home by 7:30 or No, dont wait. Spouse B--okay, text me before you leave If, for some reason, 9 pm rolls around and spouse A hasn't come home? Spouse B--hey, are you okay? please let me know when you'l be home and take uber if you've been drinking. Spouse b-sorry, leaving in 15 mins. |
This isn't a good example of middle ground and in your example, you are more like OP than you think. |
Absurd question gets absurd response. Most of the other posters found the OP's behavior to be not unlike that of a pet mutely and helplessly waiting for its human to come home. What adult waits silently for hours, and then has to ask an online forum whether she should have dinner now or keep waiting? |
Hmm, interesting. FWIW, am often "spouse B' in this scenario. My spouse's desire to know if I am home for dinner or not and when to expect me does not seem unreasonable--it is not a passive aggressive complaint, it is simply wanting to know how to plan the evening. We have two kids who need to be put to bed, etc, so I always be sure to ask if its okay to go out and let my spouse know when I think I'm home. If he hasn't heard from my after my expected return, I am usually the one to check in but if I forget and he checks in, I dont take it as anything other than his making sure all is okay. . He would do the same for me. I totally get why people are jumping on OP--because she's being incredibly passive aggressive rather than simply communicating with her spouse. But I dont think its unreasonable to communicate or expect communication from your spouse about your whereabouts, especially when drinking is involved. |
PP here, I mean, I am spouse A. My partner works from home or travels. I'm the one with happy hours. |
Sure it is. Key difference here: spouse A checks in to see if the behavior is an inconvenience. OP's spouse simply announces that he is going out, and does not communicate that he won't be home to eat. |
np + 4. OP, I will be astonished if he is your boyfriend long after this. Unless you are both off. |
+ 1 A grown man must: Ask for agreement Establish a curfew Call / text when en route home Just put the ankle bracelet on him and make everyone happy. |
SO WHY DIDN'T SHE ASK |