Thank you! Holy batman, so many whiny man-babies in this world. I do feel like some men get jealous of the babies and the attention it takes away from them. These men are selfish and insecure and definitely should not have babies. Unfortunately, it's hard to tell whether a man will be this way when you decide to marry him. |
Then let him go see a shrink. |
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FFS. Of course you cancel date night when you have a vomiting seven-week-old. What sort of entitled whiner is OP married to? Ugh.
I have been happily married for 20+ years and part of the reason is that neither of us are such whiny drama queens. We own our business and pay receipts when life calls for it. |
Preach on. Nailed it. |
So don’t call it PPD. I’ve had PPD and I’m not insulted, BTW. The better phrased question is: My DH is depressed and I’m 7w postpartum and don’t know how to support him medically. Any advice? |
Go spend some time in the relationships forum for a preview of your future life. Seriously when you're in a marriage both people need to be supported and communicating when you're feeling depressed and lost is something that should be embraced and not shut down. Of course to a reasonable extent. He should realize that twins are exceptionally difficult and focus on helping her through this. But no one can control what they feel and talking about your feelings instead of bottling them up is a good thing. |
When did OP say she needed to be treated like a queen? She said she doesn’t know how to support her infant husband because she’s also overwhelmed/stressed/exhausted. |
I feel like you either skimmed the OP or have changed the facts since you read it to suit your narrative. OP's DH didn't communicate that he felt depressed and lost. He gave OP the silent treatment and then accused her of loving the babies more than him. Is he probably depressed and lost? Sure, that's a better explanation than "giant suppurating *sshole." Is he this open communicator being attacked for being in touch with his emotions that you have invented? Nope, not even close. |
I think we interpreted the op differently. Probably because of our own husbands coloring how we read it. Sounds to me like they abandoned a date night. He got mad and distant but eventually told her why he was feeling like he was. I assume he didn't get inappropriately angry because the OP doesn't say that. I assume he didn't try to put it all on her because she seems more worried than angry herself. If OP sounded angry and implied this was a long pattern of him ignoring her pain my advice would be different. She posted as someone who knows she has a sensitive husband but who has noticed a downturn in his mental health over the last 7 weeks. He hasn't been treating her like crap for a prolonged period, he got upset and out took him a day or two to explain why. |
I agree. These are innocent tiny tiny babies who need you both right now. This is what is going on in your lives and a priority at moment. This will pass, but geesh! He sounds whiny to me. I am not sure I would be so kind to my husband - especially as I was still recovering. He should be taking care of you. I am glad to hear he is in there equally with you. That is very positive. I’d just let him know you get it -but babies needs are more urgent right now. This will shift. |
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Podtpartim depression for men is real.
http://postpartummen.com/postpartum-depression/ |
I'm not sure what you mean by our husbands coloring our view, unless you're seeing some of your husband in the OP's description and it's making you more sympathetic? Also I'd be worried too if I was jointly responsible for the lives of 2 newborns and the other person who was supposed to be dedicated to their health and safety told me he resented them. Look, nobody disagrees that OP is being a freaking saint in her reaction to this. I'm not sure why her incredible diplomacy means you think I need to pretend her DH has PPD. |
::links to incredibly unbiased source "postpartummen.com" saying that men don't get post-partum depression, they get Paternal PostNatal Depression:: ::pats self on back:: |
+1,000 |
You don't understand how your relationship with your husband and other posters relationships with their husbands can't influence how you give advice when presented with another woman talking about an issue? My husband is supportive and helpful and loving but does have some history with depression. He is more likely to squash it down and muscle through than ops husband which I think has pros and cons. I only have my own life experience to look at when giving advice so I assume based on my life im inclined to feel empathy or look at this with a more generous interpretation. I'm not trying to convince you he has ppd though and not sure where I said that. I think be sounds depressed and that depression is a serious medical condition that needs attention and that generally relationships where people communicate what they're feeling are healthier than the alternative. |