You would be nothing without me

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My ex said this about me during a divorce. I agree it’s something cruel and abusive that insecure people say to try to manipulate you into feeling low-self esteem. I also think it’s a lot of projecting. They feel like they are nothing without you. Neither are true.


Stop the "insecure people" act like ahole krap. Most people who act like a cruel a hole are not insecure, they're just aholes.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My exh made very similar comments until we feel out of contact after the divorce. There were a lot of variations of "you will not be successful" and "I will be ridiculously successful". He even claimed he would be the US president and I would watch him on TV with a different first lady. Anyway, fast forward and I'm much more successful than he is, both in terms of salary and job prestige. My advice- don't try to overanalyze this. He is trying to make you doubt yourself and lose confidence and that's all there is to it.

When he makes comments like that, if you seek to "understand his view" it only encourages him to ramp up the verbal abuse since you're falling for it by pretending it is anything other than abuse. Also, don't tell him he is being abusive because that is also encouraging to him so he can discuss how you deserve it.

Just shut it down with "that's the most narcissistic thing I've heard an actual adult say" or "okay Larlo, keep flapping your gums, who cares if no one is listening". Your central message: idgaf what you think.


yup

petty
narcissistic
delusional
psycho
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:He’s insecure, hurting, lashing out. People act crazy and say crazy things when it’s divorce time.


No, he's showing his true colors now. He is fully unmasked. he's been called out.

Notice how he hasn't brought up what's best for the kid even. Far off his juvenile anger radar.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Maybe he's mad that he married someone who is going to divorce him



like he's some passive onlooker, deadweight in his very own life. thinking there are no consequences ever. fascinating.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:A close friend of mine's DH said pretty much the same to her while I was at their home. Her background is very similar to yours. she already had a CPA and a Masters before she met him. They were not even fighting.

It's destroyed my relationship with her because I can't stand the man and she would not stop trying to make our friendship a couples friendship.

I think he is insecure because she is incredibly beautiful. She is way out of his league. And she is much smarter than he is too.


Pls don't dump your friend because she's with a mentally disordered guy. SHe may be trapped with kids. Hope she looked in to all her bad options.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ok, so we are talking divorce. And spouse keeps saying stuff like ‘you would be nothing without me’ and ‘I made you everything you are’. FWIW I met him at 30- after I had 2 graduate degrees and the same (not fancy government) job that I have now.
I am not looking to bash him- just understand. In the context of a divorce, what is the motivating reason for folks to say these types of things? I think if I can understand the reasoning behind the feelings I can diffuse the situation better.
We have a kid- hence why I’m looking to build stability.
'
My ex said something similar. It made me realize divorce was the right choice.
Anonymous
He is wrong. But also women don’t understand how tough divorce is on men. Yes yes I know he had multiple chances, I gave him many warnings, he was this way for years, he refused to change etc I get it. Regardless of the reasons divorce in 99.9% of cases is liberating for women and I am not even talking about situations involving alcoholism or physical/verbal abuse. Women feel a massive weight of their shoulders once their divorce is finalized. For men it’s the beginning of a tough recovery.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:He is wrong. But also women don’t understand how tough divorce is on men. Yes yes I know he had multiple chances, I gave him many warnings, he was this way for years, he refused to change etc I get it. Regardless of the reasons divorce in 99.9% of cases is liberating for women and I am not even talking about situations involving alcoholism or physical/verbal abuse. Women feel a massive weight of their shoulders once their divorce is finalized. For men it’s the beginning of a tough recovery.


Ehhh.
From what I saw in 8+ divorces, most men just stuff it down, told themselves they were wonderful, worked a ton more, Disney dad every other week, and slapped up a bunch of photos for OLD.

People who don’t care about others, don’t care about others. And they are not self aware nor reflective. They just ram rod ahead with their false narratives.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:He is feeling slighted.
Signed,
A woman who paved her stbx’s way into silly valley yet he is acting like all the money is his


This is BS.

How did you pave his way and not make it there yourself? Why did you not make the money yourself?

He sounds like an ahole but you sound like one too by suggesting you made him. Don't diminish someone's accomplishments.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:It’s controlling and emotionally abusive. You’re right to divorce him, because it will wear on you over time. I hope the divorce is amicable and that you’re able to move on reasonably quickly.


Yes, we can tell from her brief posts that she is TOTALLY right to complicate her life, his life, and potentially ruin their kid’s childhood. God forbid something ever “wears” on an adult with responsibility over a child.

I suggest some of you check out the XH leaving kids alone at night thread for some more data before you’re so quick to cheerlead divorce.
Anonymous
He is hurt and angry. Resents that you are looking forward to a future without him.

It is immature and pathetic. Just tune him out.
Anonymous


I picked you out, I shook you up
And turned you around
Turned you into someone new
Now five years later on you've got the world at your feet
Success has been so easy for you
But don't forget it's me who put you where you are now
And I can put you back down too.
Don't. Don't you want me?
You know I can't believe it when I hear that you won't see me
Don't. Don't you want me?
You know I don't believe you when you say that you don't need me
It's much too late to find
When you think you've changed your mind
You'd better change it back or we will both be sorry
Anonymous
The OP isn’t here, people. This thread is five years old ffs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Ok, so we are talking divorce. And spouse keeps saying stuff like ‘you would be nothing without me’ and ‘I made you everything you are’. FWIW I met him at 30- after I had 2 graduate degrees and the same (not fancy government) job that I have now.
I am not looking to bash him- just understand. In the context of a divorce, what is the motivating reason for folks to say these types of things? I think if I can understand the reasoning behind the feelings I can diffuse the situation better.
We have a kid- hence why I’m looking to build stability.


Whatever little he did to care and support, he feels you don't value it or him. Show due appreciation as he seems to crave it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes it's true. My husband comes from trailer trash but their educated mom saw to it that they all got through college. Nevertheless, most of his nieces and nephews have dropped out of high school and his siblings live in conditions as bad or worse than those in which they grew up. He married up (me).
I pushed him to seek promotions, professional friends and our kids seem to be following our example. He is horrified and embarrassed by his siblings' situation.
I've said something similar during blowouts. In happier times he's acknowledged it's true.


You should really do some work to figure out why you are engaging in such low blows during fights.
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