Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How did you end up being the social life manager for your family? That's probably part of the issue. This is like households where the wife becomes the cleaning directory and her husband becomes her "helper." Over time, he starts acting like an employee who only does something with he is told, instead of feeling like he has skin in the game.
Does he have anything healthwise going on? Maybe something that causes him to be irritable. Hyperacusis? This can be social functions painful. Also, things like depression, anxiety, etc.
OP here. I think the social thing is just my nature. Most women I know fill that tole within their families, and it comes more naturally to me. I actually love for him to do stuff with the guys alone (he never plans of course, but is still included a lot of the time), so it's not like I'm always even involved.
I've actually thought about the whole mental health situation, but nothing else in his life indicates that at all...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No idea why you are nagging him. You being ashamed of him and making excuses is your own problem and frankly he deserves better from a partner. You can go to events on your own and allow him his down time so he can continue to be a great dad and provider. Your selfish desire to force him to be in uncomfortable situations so you can look good will probably drive him away. Grow up. You're not playing a married couple on tv that has to keep up appearances. Care more about your partner's happiness than what the jones' think. Find some girlfriends to go out with you if you can't stand to show up solo. Give your spouse a break. He's not your ken doll.
This is a tad extreme. It's not unreasonable for her to expect him to be able to go out with her once a week.
Once a week is a lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op do you have any sense why he has changed in this way? Could he have anxiety or something? leaving the wedding and the guys' weekend early sound pretty weird and make me think his desire to be at home is more than just being an introvert.
In any case, I see how this would be really frustrating. If he just said he'd rather not go but you are welcome to go, or you could have an understanding that when people come over he will largely be at the grill and then put the kids to bed, fine. But grumping about everything would be super exhausting. Can you make more plans without him?
Thanks so much for understanding! I'm a big believer that in a marriage you can't expect someone to change completely. I knew he was never a big politician over-the-top friendly type, and that never bothered me. But this has definitely gotten worse. It may be because there is very little downtime because of the kids. He also is in an open office environment and I recognize that takes a lot out of an introvert - basically having to be "on" at work all day. It may not sound like it in my regional post but I really do try to be understanding. I feel guilty about the resentment and want to figure out a middle ground.
Anonymous wrote:Op do you have any sense why he has changed in this way? Could he have anxiety or something? leaving the wedding and the guys' weekend early sound pretty weird and make me think his desire to be at home is more than just being an introvert.
In any case, I see how this would be really frustrating. If he just said he'd rather not go but you are welcome to go, or you could have an understanding that when people come over he will largely be at the grill and then put the kids to bed, fine. But grumping about everything would be super exhausting. Can you make more plans without him?
Anonymous wrote:No idea why you are nagging him. You being ashamed of him and making excuses is your own problem and frankly he deserves better from a partner. You can go to events on your own and allow him his down time so he can continue to be a great dad and provider. Your selfish desire to force him to be in uncomfortable situations so you can look good will probably drive him away. Grow up. You're not playing a married couple on tv that has to keep up appearances. Care more about your partner's happiness than what the jones' think. Find some girlfriends to go out with you if you can't stand to show up solo. Give your spouse a break. He's not your ken doll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No idea why you are nagging him. You being ashamed of him and making excuses is your own problem and frankly he deserves better from a partner. You can go to events on your own and allow him his down time so he can continue to be a great dad and provider. Your selfish desire to force him to be in uncomfortable situations so you can look good will probably drive him away. Grow up. You're not playing a married couple on tv that has to keep up appearances. Care more about your partner's happiness than what the jones' think. Find some girlfriends to go out with you if you can't stand to show up solo. Give your spouse a break. He's not your ken doll.
This is a tad extreme. It's not unreasonable for her to expect him to be able to go out with her once a week.
Anonymous wrote:How did you end up being the social life manager for your family? That's probably part of the issue. This is like households where the wife becomes the cleaning directory and her husband becomes her "helper." Over time, he starts acting like an employee who only does something with he is told, instead of feeling like he has skin in the game.
Does he have anything healthwise going on? Maybe something that causes him to be irritable. Hyperacusis? This can be social functions painful. Also, things like depression, anxiety, etc.
Anonymous wrote:No idea why you are nagging him. You being ashamed of him and making excuses is your own problem and frankly he deserves better from a partner. You can go to events on your own and allow him his down time so he can continue to be a great dad and provider. Your selfish desire to force him to be in uncomfortable situations so you can look good will probably drive him away. Grow up. You're not playing a married couple on tv that has to keep up appearances. Care more about your partner's happiness than what the jones' think. Find some girlfriends to go out with you if you can't stand to show up solo. Give your spouse a break. He's not your ken doll.