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Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Reply to "Here's the thing I don't understand about husbands who don't help out"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I really can’t control or change my husband. I do what the OP suggests and it works but the feedback never gets embedded into his brain so we have to have the same conversation over and over again for years. It wears me down. It’s like every single day is a brand new day. I can never assume a foundational base of fundamental knowledge or that he will have learned. Examples: -I have to tell DH to pick up dirty diapers off the floor and put them in the garbage. Every single time. -I have to tell DH, every single night, to please put his dishes in the dishwasher and then start it. If I don’t specifically mention that he needs to finish loading the dishes in, and THEN start it, he will just go start it half full and leave a bunch of dirty dishes on the counter for the morning. -I have to tell DH to get the kids ready for the day (we trade of days for getting them ready). He has to be told, every time, what that means. I can’t just say “get the kids ready please”. It has to be “can you change them out of their jammies?” And then “can you put shoes on them?” And so on and so forth. I’m exhausted and bitter. [/quote] I would say to him, “it concerns me that you need me to remind you to pick the dirty diapers off the floor every single day. Do you need this type of hand holding at work? No? Then why can’t you remember basic things at home?” I wouldn’t be nasty but calm and genuine. Personally I suspect he is gas lighting you about not being able to remember but if he isn’t, that would suggest some pretty serious cognitive impairment. I mean that truthfully. I might actually say that to him so the embarrassment gets him off his ass.[/quote] My DH was like this after DD was born and it was so exhausting and strange to experience as his partner that I was insistent he had early dementia or something. It turned out he has ADHD and significantly impaired executive functioning skills. Medication has helped a tiny bit, but he basically approaches each day like it is his first experience in the adult universe. [/quote]
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