Anonymous wrote:Is this something you all have done before? If your husband wants you to change something about yourselves, he keeps a running tally on the fridge and you have found that helpful?
Personally I would find that so odd and uncomfortable if my spouse kept a running tally on a fridge of areas he wanted me to change.
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like this behavior is unacceptable to you, OP. (And that’s reasonable; most people wouldn’t accept it.) Yet, by keeping a tally and taking the blame some of the time, the message you send is that it’s kind of ok to a point. Of course your husband is the one in the wrong, and ideally he would stop. But if it’s behavior modification you seek, you need avoid reinforcing this pattern. So, yes, go to counseling. And stop engaging with him when he blame shifts. Name the behavior and walk away. “I’ll talk to you when you’re ready to take responsibility for your actions” is all you have to say. Don’t argue or explain. Leave the house if he insists on having it out. He needs to learn to live with the daily discomfort of taking responsibility for small mistakes.
Anonymous wrote:I have spoken with my husband on multiple occasions how it is not ok to immediately blame me for *anything* that goes wrong in the house. He says he will resolve his behavior and then does nothing to fix it. In the past week he has blamed me for:
Forgetting to flush the toilet, when in fact he shortly realized afterwards he was the last one to use the toilet as I was in the shower, upstairs.
Leaving his own keys in his pocket and making a racket in the dryer. I reminded him that he needs to empty his pockets before he puts his pants in the dirty laundry bin.
The garage door suddenly opening when he had in fact, sat on the remote garage door opener.
I cleaned his bathroom drawers and he blamed me for his missing retainer, after I found it in a basket and he realized he had moved it earlier that morning.
When I ask him, he either apologizes or tries to continue to deflect his behavior. He has admitted it's easier for him to blame me than to admit his own faults, which i've told him is NOT ok. I've started a running tally on the fridge and tell him when he gets to 10, I get a week off from taking the blame.
We have been in marriage counselling before and I'm seriously considering going back to a marriage counsellor to address it. He is otherwise a very kind person, but my god he will fly off the handle at the most benign issue and immediately blame me for his own faults!
Anonymous wrote:I have spoken with my husband on multiple occasions how it is not ok to immediately blame me for *anything* that goes wrong in the house. He says he will resolve his behavior and then does nothing to fix it. In the past week he has blamed me for:
Forgetting to flush the toilet, when in fact he shortly realized afterwards he was the last one to use the toilet as I was in the shower, upstairs.
Leaving his own keys in his pocket and making a racket in the dryer. I reminded him that he needs to empty his pockets before he puts his pants in the dirty laundry bin.
The garage door suddenly opening when he had in fact, sat on the remote garage door opener.
I cleaned his bathroom drawers and he blamed me for his missing retainer, after I found it in a basket and he realized he had moved it earlier that morning.
When I ask him, he either apologizes or tries to continue to deflect his behavior. He has admitted it's easier for him to blame me than to admit his own faults, which i've told him is NOT ok. I've started a running tally on the fridge and tell him when he gets to 10, I get a week off from taking the blame.
We have been in marriage counselling before and I'm seriously considering going back to a marriage counsellor to address it. He is otherwise a very kind person, but my god he will fly off the handle at the most benign issue and immediately blame me for his own faults!
Anonymous wrote:My DH is like that. To make it worse, I have ADD, so I am used to making mistakes and taking the blame. For someone like our partners, I am the perfect wife because I make such a convenient scapegoat. So it takes its toll on my sense of competence and breeds resentment both.
Anonymous wrote:Why would you put up with his crap?