Have husband quit low paying job and be the default parent and house manager. |
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Perhaps you need to be specific about what you need your DH to do. Saying “I need help” might be too vague. Have you said, “I’m looking to change jobs, you’ll need to increase your income to pay the difference, cut spending on XYZ, help out more around the house by doing XYZ, etc.” I completely understand your frustration about him not stepping up on his own, but maybe he needs a push in a specific direction.
I also understand that you want to share the mental load with him. I’m like that too. As the breadwinner with a demanding job, I carry a ridiculous amount of stress about everything it seems. Often it seems like my DH doesn’t want to hear it and couldn’t care less. But deep down I know he cares—he’s just very calm and stoic on the outside. If I’m honest with myself, he’s a good counterbalance to my anxious tendencies. I don’t always appreciate that when I’m at the height of my stress, but it’s also not fair for me to expect him to respond the way I think he should. I figure I have my shortcomings and he has his. He shows his love for me in ways that have taken me years to recognize, but it’s there. We’ve been married 18 years. Maybe therapy would be good for you to process some of these feelings and figure out the best way forward. |
He is not responding the way she wants him to - that is fundamentally a “her” problem (even though it sounds tough emotionally for her to deal with). Suggesting that he needs drugs so that he will act in a way that meets her expectations (he is not doing anything wrong after all, he is simply not doing what she wants him to do) is ludicrous. FTR I believe that ADHD is a real diagnosis, but I strongly disagree that it should be medicated in the vast majority of cases. |
No, per the Cleveland Clinic: The term “neurodivergent” describes people whose brain differences affect how their brain works. |
Her DH should try it and executive function coaching, likely to be very helpful to him in his family under great stress, to his SN kid and in his work life. God forbid something happen to OP he needs to be able to function at a higher level re: care and earning. If he does so now, will take stress off OP, a cancer survivor. Their well being matters more than your beliefs, the family is struggling under multiple significant stressor. |
This tends to be a disaster for parents with ADD. I know from my own experience. It can be overwhelming and lacks the external structure that is helpful. Plus, with OP's cancer history, neither should drop out of working world. |
I'm glad it helped, OP. I've been in your shoes, minus cancer, but something else. Often when people CAN do better, they do. I don't think it's that he doesn't care. Get everyone functioning as best as possible using all available tools. It can sound a bit hokey but something like The 5 Love Languages (book or website) might help you both understand how to make each other feel valued. Try for a twice a month date night, even if it's at home. You both have been through a lot. A bit of fun together will help re: stress and give you a bridge to connect and some + recent shared history. Can be something free, just do it together. |