Anonymous wrote:People like you are exhausting. I can already predict you're going to be a martyr mom. No one wants to listen to you constantly complain about something and do nothing to change the situation. Either quit or find a therapist to help you deal with your issues. You'll start to kill your marriage if you just become a whiny, complaining martyr.
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes, when someone complains you need to determine: do they want help to solve this, or are they just venting? Your DH doesn’t seem to bother to clarify, and is jumping in the “I’ll help solve this”, when really all you want is to vent. Just tell him that. “I’m grumpy and need to vent. I just want you to listen and support me, not try to give solutions, ok?”
This is easily solved with some communicationgood luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Listening to someone complain about something they can't or won't change is exhausting. It's a romance killer, too. When my partner let his professional misery drag on too long, without taking any action to improve the situation, I felt myself starting to think of him as weak and helpless, just another dependent I had to manage.
Either stop complaining to him, or make a change. Ideally both. He can't make the change for you. You have to take some responsibility for your own life, without dumping on him every day.
I'm sympathetic. I've been there. But when I realized I was spending our time together every. single. day. moaning about it, I gave myself a mental shake and started applying. It's no way to live.
Could you check out mentally and coast til the baby's born?
+1
Also OP he isn’t pressuring you to quit. He’s (in his mind) encouraging you to do the thing that your constant complaining surely makes it seem like you want to do. Framing it as him “pressuring” you is completely unfair and not representative of the actual dynamic.
Anonymous wrote:I work a very mentally stressful job that my husband has been pressuring me to quit. I have been complaining but all I want is supportive and someone to listen to me. He wants to talk action and have me quit. It's now a constant topic he brings us. What do I do?
Anonymous wrote:Listening to someone complain about something they can't or won't change is exhausting. It's a romance killer, too. When my partner let his professional misery drag on too long, without taking any action to improve the situation, I felt myself starting to think of him as weak and helpless, just another dependent I had to manage.
Either stop complaining to him, or make a change. Ideally both. He can't make the change for you. You have to take some responsibility for your own life, without dumping on him every day.
I'm sympathetic. I've been there. But when I realized I was spending our time together every. single. day. moaning about it, I gave myself a mental shake and started applying. It's no way to live.
Could you check out mentally and coast til the baby's born?
Anonymous wrote:Sometimes, when someone complains you need to determine: do they want help to solve this, or are they just venting? Your DH doesn’t seem to bother to clarify, and is jumping in the “I’ll help solve this”, when really all you want is to vent. Just tell him that. “I’m grumpy and need to vent. I just want you to listen and support me, not try to give solutions, ok?”
This is easily solved with some communicationgood luck!
Anonymous wrote:How much are you complaining about your job?
good luck!