Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your parents’ divorce WILL impact your marriage because that is an experience in your life. But impacting is not the same as torpedoing.
Your choice is to either REACT when triggered by something (and yes you sound like you are triggered when everyday disappointments arise) or RESPOND instead, taking into consideration your likely bias to see everyday stressors as a big picture threat.
Take an inventory of yourself. You may be very conflict avoidant. You will have more success getting your DH to take an inventory of himself if you show him how it’s done. For example, you could say, “I’m still worried that the fight we had two days ago has chipped away at our trust. I know that I see a permanent impact of our fights, although you see things as just a temporary blip. But I am bothered a lot and I’m afraid to bring up something else that we need to resolve because I don’t want more conflict.” Something like that - im guessing here.
Btw other people’s parents staying together WILL impact their marriage too, and if the impact is unexamined, it could be detrimental too. Maybe someone thinks that divorce happens to ‘other’ people and they are overly dismissive of real problems, until their marriage crumbles. The problem is not that your parents divorced. The only problem is if you aren’t self-aware about all the good and bad baggage we each bring into relationships.
Thank you, this is helpful. -OP
Anonymous wrote:Your parents’ divorce WILL impact your marriage because that is an experience in your life. But impacting is not the same as torpedoing.
Your choice is to either REACT when triggered by something (and yes you sound like you are triggered when everyday disappointments arise) or RESPOND instead, taking into consideration your likely bias to see everyday stressors as a big picture threat.
Take an inventory of yourself. You may be very conflict avoidant. You will have more success getting your DH to take an inventory of himself if you show him how it’s done. For example, you could say, “I’m still worried that the fight we had two days ago has chipped away at our trust. I know that I see a permanent impact of our fights, although you see things as just a temporary blip. But I am bothered a lot and I’m afraid to bring up something else that we need to resolve because I don’t want more conflict.” Something like that - im guessing here.
Btw other people’s parents staying together WILL impact their marriage too, and if the impact is unexamined, it could be detrimental too. Maybe someone thinks that divorce happens to ‘other’ people and they are overly dismissive of real problems, until their marriage crumbles. The problem is not that your parents divorced. The only problem is if you aren’t self-aware about all the good and bad baggage we each bring into relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Your parents’ divorce WILL impact your marriage because that is an experience in your life. But impacting is not the same as torpedoing.
Your choice is to either REACT when triggered by something (and yes you sound like you are triggered when everyday disappointments arise) or RESPOND instead, taking into consideration your likely bias to see everyday stressors as a big picture threat.
Take an inventory of yourself. You may be very conflict avoidant. You will have more success getting your DH to take an inventory of himself if you show him how it’s done. For example, you could say, “I’m still worried that the fight we had two days ago has chipped away at our trust. I know that I see a permanent impact of our fights, although you see things as just a temporary blip. But I am bothered a lot and I’m afraid to bring up something else that we need to resolve because I don’t want more conflict.” Something like that - im guessing here.
Btw other people’s parents staying together WILL impact their marriage too, and if the impact is unexamined, it could be detrimental too. Maybe someone thinks that divorce happens to ‘other’ people and they are overly dismissive of real problems, until their marriage crumbles. The problem is not that your parents divorced. The only problem is if you aren’t self-aware about all the good and bad baggage we each bring into relationships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's a huge fear and it feels like I'm seeing signs of their troubles in my own marriage. DH is so blasé about it, he thinks everything is related to stress and a tough phase in life. He doesn't have any concern our marriage, which gives him the out to not have to open up. He's disconnected and unhappy.
But I saw my two stressed out parents ruin their marriage and lives. They had a particularly horrendous divorce after 20 years of marriage, nothing happened other than regular wear and tear on a relationship. Now I can look back and understand why my childhood was so intense. I don't want to make those mistakes. DH doesn't believe our current problems are that severe. I feel like we are walking down a path that eventually we'll disconnect enough that divorce becomes the easier choice than staying together.
Does it sound like i'm being hyper-sensitive? I literally have no childhood friends who's parents are divorced. I didn't realize this until after I had a child, but I've never had anyone I can relate to about this.
Didn't you mean aren't? Or are?
Anonymous wrote:It's a huge fear and it feels like I'm seeing signs of their troubles in my own marriage. DH is so blasé about it, he thinks everything is related to stress and a tough phase in life. He doesn't have any concern our marriage, which gives him the out to not have to open up. He's disconnected and unhappy.
But I saw my two stressed out parents ruin their marriage and lives. They had a particularly horrendous divorce after 20 years of marriage, nothing happened other than regular wear and tear on a relationship. Now I can look back and understand why my childhood was so intense. I don't want to make those mistakes. DH doesn't believe our current problems are that severe. I feel like we are walking down a path that eventually we'll disconnect enough that divorce becomes the easier choice than staying together.
Does it sound like i'm being hyper-sensitive? I literally have no childhood friends who's parents are divorced. I didn't realize this until after I had a child, but I've never had anyone I can relate to about this.