Excellent points. |
They are. Ask your psychiatrist. Look it up. Anger is related to lack of emotional control, which is related to the impulsive issues commonly seen in ADHD, and is the primary reason why people with ADHD are more likely to commit crimes and be in prison. Which is a fact you can also look up. |
NO! I read that one though. It broke my heart. Thank you again to the PPs who have offered their input. I haven’t replied to them all but I’ve read them and will consider all angles. I’m turning in now to get my requisite three hours of sleep. :/ I’ll update when I’ve had a chance to clear my head and put together an approach. Thanks again, everyone. |
Inattentive ADD, the kind that causes forgetfulness and organizational issues, is not the same as the more stereotypical ADHD. So your husband is diagnosed as combined type? |
Wishing you the best OP! |
OP, he sounds verbally and emotionally abusive. You need to get him into therapy or get yourself out of there. |
| Turn the tables on him. Outcrazy him. Blow up over the slightest infraction he commits. Break shit, scream obscenities, threaten violence and divorce. He may be so taken aback that he realizes this kind of behavior is batshit crazy. |
Thanks for saving the rest of us the trouble of asking the obvious!! |
He’a Not going to have a conversation or try to change unless he knows you are done putting up with his selfish behavior. |
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Many years ago, I had a temper problem, not on the order of your husband's, but still a temper problem. The real issue was that I was not able to handle the unexpected well. In the last 20-30 years, I have learned coping techniques that have leveled me out a lot (and with the help of my wonderful spouse who is very good at reading me and defusing the issues that cause me to react).
Your husband has an explosive temper and he does not deal with the unexpected well. For your sake, you need to find a way to present him with a conversation about the problems when you and he are separated, let him have his explosive outbursts and tantrums and give yourself a buffer of time before you actually deal with the actual conversation. For example, take a Saturday when he has no plans. Make plans for the morning and lunchtime (maybe even the afternoon) for you and the kids. Go out. Either leave him a letter before you leave or send him a text or email after you've left for him to read. This should outline the problems that you have, and that you need to have a conversation to work out how to address these issues, whether you think you can work it out together or if you need a marriage counselor to help you work it out and when you want to have this conversation. Then make sure you and the kids are gone for at least 4 hours. He can read it, have his tantrum, act all childish and then have time to recover. Ask him to text you back when he is ready to have this conversation. Tell him that he will have to be calm for the discussion. If he isn't calm, you aren't going to have the conversation. Give him a deadline, like you want to have this conversation sometime this weekend or by Wednesday. When you go home, do not mention the problem. Just go about your normal lives. If he tries to talk about it, if he can talk calmly about it, then you can discuss the time and place of the discussion. If he gets testy, then cut off the conversation and tell him that he obviously isn't ready and you'll talk about it when he set. If he gets to the deadline and can't have the conversation calmly, then make plans to move yourself and the kids out of the house until he is ready to behave like an adult and not a child and have the conversation calmly. Stay with a friend(s) or get a hotel for a few days. Tell him that if he cannot have the conversation calmly without his outbursts and tantrums, then that means he no longer wants to be a husband and father because he isn't acting like one. Right now, just like his family, you are enabling his tantrums. And the children have to bear the brunt of you and his family of origin's enabling of his bad behavior. You have to stand up to him. If you can't do it for yourself, you have to do it for your children. Good luck. |
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Agree he's probably ADD. I was like this at one time, when my kids were small. Too much stress at work, not enough support at home. I switched jobs and no longer have "rages."
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| I feel so sorry for kids. Why are you staying in an abusive relationship. And yes you are modeling marriage for them and this is why they will end up with. I can’t imagine standing by while my husband screams at my kid about getting dressed. Imagine how terrifying that is to a young kid. And you said the kid is a “jerk”— where are they Lear big that behavior. And now husband will get some form of shared custody and you won’t be able to protect your kids. And you did know he was like this before you married him. |
| And op he isn’t “good to the kids” if he is verbally and emotionally abusing their mother in front of them. |
Are you sure you will be safe if you confront him? Because I’m not. I think you should leave, and I never say that. |
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My brother, two years older than me, expressed from his earliest days the type of behavior you described. He made my life a living hell. He sodomized me when I was 11. My parents knew and did nothing.
I left home at 18. Attended a family reunion in 1989. Spoke to my mother in 2000. Attended my oldest brother's birthday in 2010. More than enough contact given the toxic atmosphere. Leave. |