Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d be calling divorce lawyers and making copies of all of our bank records, taxes, important documents, etc. He sounds like an abusive ass.
+1. 100%
+2
OP here. I'm surprised that so many posters think that I should divorce. It is difficult when our lives are so entangled, and we have a young child. I'd much rather try to make it work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your replies. I agree, the problem is much deeper than the two plates.
He doesn't want to do therapy. He says that I should change my behavior. I admit, the kitchen is often not tidied up. He says that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon, he expects the house to be perfect. The housekeeper comes once a week, on Saturdays.
The housekeeper does his laundry and changes the sheets.
Often he makes things about himself when that should not be the case. For example, our son doesn't want to be friends anymore with a boy in his class, because the behavior of this boy is increasingly weird. The mom of another boy in our child's circle of friends didn't know that and invited this boy to a planned group event at our house on a Friday afternoon. After my husband came home, he called this other mom, telling her that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon after a difficult week at work, he doesn't want to have to encounter this boy.
My son doesn't like his dad's behavior, but is already trying to rationalize it saying "he's just a nice guy with a bad temper."
My husband grew up with a similar father: an otherwise nice guy but with frequent outbursts of anger. My husband and his mother tiptoed around him in eggshells. They hated him. She was a sahm and did not think that she could afford to divorce him.
How did he get the number of this mom? That would be weird for anyone to do rather than talk to you first. The guy can't pick up a dish or do his own laundry but has the audacity to call up a mom and criticize a young boy when he doesn't even have to do anything related to him? Criticizes you but instead this time he bypassed you to call her up? It doesn't add up. That is a huge deal but one I kind of doubt actually happened with this guy. He would criticize and put it on you if the pattern repeated, no?
OP here. My husband has the phone number of other parents of both genders, just like I have the phone numbers of (and actually talk to) not only of the moms but also of the dads. What is so strange about that? Furthermore, specifically with these parents we actually happen to be friends, so I don't see anything weird about him calling her. I do see a problem with him making this about himself instead of "this boy being here makes our son uncomfortable". That boy never did anything to my husband, they barely ever saw each other.
OP here again. PP, why do you doubt that this actually happened? Do you think that people on this forum just make up stuff? We all have things to do and most definitely do not want to waste our time here if we were not looking for answers to real problems. I hate it when some are so quick to shout troll, just because something they read does not fit with their life experience.
You seem perfectly capable of approaching your husband with your words. You are not a walking on eggshells kind of gal at least with posters here. If you can say that stuff here, you can approach your husband.
It is weird because first off if you are friends with the family you don't just call someone up like that and complain about their kid. Second, since this is the domestic realm, it doesn't make sense that he would just take matters into his own hands here and unilaterally call them without making it your issue. Also, if he's friends with the family, why would he call the mom and not the dad he's friends with? Anyway, I'd be done with you as a family if someone did this to me out of the blue. Whether you tolerate that is your choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't like his focus on "respect". Does he think he is a sort of king who needs to be served? Or does he think manhood means being served? Is he black? Sometimes AA get sucked into this mentality (always demanding "respect"), ask a black woman, we know--not that all men we know are like this but it is a presence in some in the community.
OP here. My husband is not AA. We have Western European roots. Still, respect is a huge issue with him, because he does not seem to be getting much in his job.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your replies. I agree, the problem is much deeper than the two plates.
He doesn't want to do therapy. He says that I should change my behavior. I admit, the kitchen is often not tidied up. He says that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon, he expects the house to be perfect. The housekeeper comes once a week, on Saturdays.
The housekeeper does his laundry and changes the sheets.
Often he makes things about himself when that should not be the case. For example, our son doesn't want to be friends anymore with a boy in his class, because the behavior of this boy is increasingly weird. The mom of another boy in our child's circle of friends didn't know that and invited this boy to a planned group event at our house on a Friday afternoon. After my husband came home, he called this other mom, telling her that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon after a difficult week at work, he doesn't want to have to encounter this boy.
My son doesn't like his dad's behavior, but is already trying to rationalize it saying "he's just a nice guy with a bad temper."
My husband grew up with a similar father: an otherwise nice guy but with frequent outbursts of anger. My husband and his mother tiptoed around him in eggshells. They hated him. She was a sahm and did not think that she could afford to divorce him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your replies. I agree, the problem is much deeper than the two plates.
He doesn't want to do therapy. He says that I should change my behavior. I admit, the kitchen is often not tidied up. He says that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon, he expects the house to be perfect. The housekeeper comes once a week, on Saturdays.
The housekeeper does his laundry and changes the sheets.
Often he makes things about himself when that should not be the case. For example, our son doesn't want to be friends anymore with a boy in his class, because the behavior of this boy is increasingly weird. The mom of another boy in our child's circle of friends didn't know that and invited this boy to a planned group event at our house on a Friday afternoon. After my husband came home, he called this other mom, telling her that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon after a difficult week at work, he doesn't want to have to encounter this boy.
My son doesn't like his dad's behavior, but is already trying to rationalize it saying "he's just a nice guy with a bad temper."
My husband grew up with a similar father: an otherwise nice guy but with frequent outbursts of anger. My husband and his mother tiptoed around him in eggshells. They hated him. She was a sahm and did not think that she could afford to divorce him.
How did he get the number of this mom? That would be weird for anyone to do rather than talk to you first. The guy can't pick up a dish or do his own laundry but has the audacity to call up a mom and criticize a young boy when he doesn't even have to do anything related to him? Criticizes you but instead this time he bypassed you to call her up? It doesn't add up. That is a huge deal but one I kind of doubt actually happened with this guy. He would criticize and put it on you if the pattern repeated, no?
OP here. My husband has the phone number of other parents of both genders, just like I have the phone numbers of (and actually talk to) not only of the moms but also of the dads. What is so strange about that? Furthermore, specifically with these parents we actually happen to be friends, so I don't see anything weird about him calling her. I do see a problem with him making this about himself instead of "this boy being here makes our son uncomfortable". That boy never did anything to my husband, they barely ever saw each other.
OP here again. PP, why do you doubt that this actually happened? Do you think that people on this forum just make up stuff? We all have things to do and most definitely do not want to waste our time here if we were not looking for answers to real problems. I hate it when some are so quick to shout troll, just because something they read does not fit with their life experience.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't like his focus on "respect". Does he think he is a sort of king who needs to be served? Or does he think manhood means being served? Is he black? Sometimes AA get sucked into this mentality (always demanding "respect"), ask a black woman, we know--not that all men we know are like this but it is a presence in some in the community.
OP here. My husband is not AA. We have Western European roots. Still, respect is a huge issue with him, because he does not seem to be getting much in his job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your replies. I agree, the problem is much deeper than the two plates.
He doesn't want to do therapy. He says that I should change my behavior. I admit, the kitchen is often not tidied up. He says that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon, he expects the house to be perfect. The housekeeper comes once a week, on Saturdays.
The housekeeper does his laundry and changes the sheets.
Often he makes things about himself when that should not be the case. For example, our son doesn't want to be friends anymore with a boy in his class, because the behavior of this boy is increasingly weird. The mom of another boy in our child's circle of friends didn't know that and invited this boy to a planned group event at our house on a Friday afternoon. After my husband came home, he called this other mom, telling her that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon after a difficult week at work, he doesn't want to have to encounter this boy.
My son doesn't like his dad's behavior, but is already trying to rationalize it saying "he's just a nice guy with a bad temper."
My husband grew up with a similar father: an otherwise nice guy but with frequent outbursts of anger. My husband and his mother tiptoed around him in eggshells. They hated him. She was a sahm and did not think that she could afford to divorce him.
How did he get the number of this mom? That would be weird for anyone to do rather than talk to you first. The guy can't pick up a dish or do his own laundry but has the audacity to call up a mom and criticize a young boy when he doesn't even have to do anything related to him? Criticizes you but instead this time he bypassed you to call her up? It doesn't add up. That is a huge deal but one I kind of doubt actually happened with this guy. He would criticize and put it on you if the pattern repeated, no?
OP here. My husband has the phone number of other parents of both genders, just like I have the phone numbers of (and actually talk to) not only of the moms but also of the dads. What is so strange about that? Furthermore, specifically with these parents we actually happen to be friends, so I don't see anything weird about him calling her. I do see a problem with him making this about himself instead of "this boy being here makes our son uncomfortable". That boy never did anything to my husband, they barely ever saw each other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’d be calling divorce lawyers and making copies of all of our bank records, taxes, important documents, etc. He sounds like an abusive ass.
+1. 100%
+2
OP here. I'm surprised that so many posters think that I should divorce. It is difficult when our lives are so entangled, and we have a young child. I'd much rather try to make it work
Divorce is the default knee jerk reaction from most people but if you can make it work, you owe it to your child to try. Talk to your husband when you both are relaxed about why kindness in marriage is as necessary as respect and why respect goes both ways. If you are smart enough to train a dog or raise a child, you can retrain a husband but aim should be for for mutual benefit not just yours.
Anonymous wrote:I don't like his focus on "respect". Does he think he is a sort of king who needs to be served? Or does he think manhood means being served? Is he black? Sometimes AA get sucked into this mentality (always demanding "respect"), ask a black woman, we know--not that all men we know are like this but it is a presence in some in the community.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for your replies. I agree, the problem is much deeper than the two plates.
He doesn't want to do therapy. He says that I should change my behavior. I admit, the kitchen is often not tidied up. He says that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon, he expects the house to be perfect. The housekeeper comes once a week, on Saturdays.
The housekeeper does his laundry and changes the sheets.
Often he makes things about himself when that should not be the case. For example, our son doesn't want to be friends anymore with a boy in his class, because the behavior of this boy is increasingly weird. The mom of another boy in our child's circle of friends didn't know that and invited this boy to a planned group event at our house on a Friday afternoon. After my husband came home, he called this other mom, telling her that when he comes home on a Friday afternoon after a difficult week at work, he doesn't want to have to encounter this boy.
My son doesn't like his dad's behavior, but is already trying to rationalize it saying "he's just a nice guy with a bad temper."
My husband grew up with a similar father: an otherwise nice guy but with frequent outbursts of anger. My husband and his mother tiptoed around him in eggshells. They hated him. She was a sahm and did not think that she could afford to divorce him.
How did he get the number of this mom? That would be weird for anyone to do rather than talk to you first. The guy can't pick up a dish or do his own laundry but has the audacity to call up a mom and criticize a young boy when he doesn't even have to do anything related to him? Criticizes you but instead this time he bypassed you to call her up? It doesn't add up. That is a huge deal but one I kind of doubt actually happened with this guy. He would criticize and put it on you if the pattern repeated, no?