Anonymous wrote:I don't buy it either.
You probably felt you were gentle but you were being condescending and argumentative. You probably harped on and on about driving mistakes and she exploded and responded I'm never driving them again.
In the end, if she is a bad driver she shouldn't be driving the kids around. Great if she never drives them again
Anonymous wrote:^^Wtf? In a partnership, if one person says “I’m not fond of that,” the reasonable response is to ask “why not”? And then to stay in the discussion so both partners understand what each likes. It’s completely immature to respond “well then I’m not participating.” This doesn’t appear to be a situation where the DW has spent months doing research only to be sit down by an uninvolved DH. And if that situation were occurring, the mature response would be, “I’m feeling frustrated. . . “. Not “do it yourself.
And I’m a woman, btw. One who finds most of the DWs posting here to sound exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:^^Wtf? In a partnership, if one person says “I’m not fond of that,” the reasonable response is to ask “why not”? And then to stay in the discussion so both partners understand what each likes. It’s completely immature to respond “well then I’m not participating.” This doesn’t appear to be a situation where the DW has spent months doing research only to be sit down by an uninvolved DH. And if that situation were occurring, the mature response would be, “I’m feeling frustrated. . . “. Not “do it yourself.
And I’m a woman, btw. One who finds most of the DWs posting here to sound exhausting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My wife recently asked me if I liked a particular piece of furniture she is considering. I wasn't fond of it and asked her if we could consider alternatives. Instead of exploring alternatives, she stopped looking altogether, and told me that I can just pick what I want, since "you don't like my choices". Well, that kind of spoils the fun of looking for furniture if we can't do it together.
Another example ... my wife didn't drive for many years, before we met. She lived downtown and simply didn't need a car. Recently, however, she started to drive again. Because her driving skills were rusty, I asked her to drive solo for a few weeks, without our kids in the car, in order to get the hang of it again. I should also add that she had never driven in the USA before (she is from another country). I didn't want our kids at risk while she went through the learning process. But after acclimating to USA roads, she told me she never wants to drive with the kids in the car, in order to avoid causing a fight with me.
There are countless similar examples. It is so damn frustrating. Her attitude makes it impossible for us to have any discussion unless our opinions align precisely.
Has anybody been in this situation? Did you find a remedy? If so, please share your approach.
I'm one of the pp's who gets where your wife is coming from. Just saying "I'm not fond of it" is useless information to her. You've rejected her choice, but given her no feedback to work with in looking at other things. You could have asked her what she liked about it. You could have figured out what elements of the furniture you did like, and what elements of the furniture you didn't like. How did you feel about the color? The style? The price? Having her do all the legwork, and then you simply accepting or dismissing her choices without explanation does not count as "doing it together". It's making her do all the work, and you are acting like the final decision maker. I totally get why she shut down after that.
Anonymous wrote:My wife recently asked me if I liked a particular piece of furniture she is considering. I wasn't fond of it and asked her if we could consider alternatives. Instead of exploring alternatives, she stopped looking altogether, and told me that I can just pick what I want, since "you don't like my choices". Well, that kind of spoils the fun of looking for furniture if we can't do it together.
Another example ... my wife didn't drive for many years, before we met. She lived downtown and simply didn't need a car. Recently, however, she started to drive again. Because her driving skills were rusty, I asked her to drive solo for a few weeks, without our kids in the car, in order to get the hang of it again. I should also add that she had never driven in the USA before (she is from another country). I didn't want our kids at risk while she went through the learning process. But after acclimating to USA roads, she told me she never wants to drive with the kids in the car, in order to avoid causing a fight with me.
There are countless similar examples. It is so damn frustrating. Her attitude makes it impossible for us to have any discussion unless our opinions align precisely.
Has anybody been in this situation? Did you find a remedy? If so, please share your approach.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone give a good example of what the wife ought to say? Assuming that she likes the chair and isn’t interested in doing any additional shopping, what is a reasonable response to her DH saying that he doesn’t like the chair and wants to shop together?
"I honestly thought you would like it. Anyway, I am tired of searching, and I am going to buy it. I told you I was searching earlier, and you waited this long for your input. You should let me know your preference earlier next time."
"Stop whining and do it yourself next time or offer suggestions earlier rather than criticize all the effort I have put in."
I have used these, but it is easy for me to say these because my husband knows exactly what I am talking about.
Sometimes, if the issue/purchase is more important to him than it is to me I indulge his complaints and try to figure out what he wants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:She is the bio mother. First wife.
I really think here's the bottom line. You "not letting" her drive is you treating her like a child and its insulting. How about - "you're still making big driving mistakes. I'm not comfortable with you driving our kids. Can we talk about it?"
I used the strategy that you are describing, almost exactly. Even more gently. But it didn't work. She was offended.
OP - you actually said, "Can we talk about this?" and her response was... "I'm never driving the kids again!!"
Now I don't believe you.
Anonymous wrote:She is the bio mother. First wife.
I really think here's the bottom line. You "not letting" her drive is you treating her like a child and its insulting. How about - "you're still making big driving mistakes. I'm not comfortable with you driving our kids. Can we talk about it?"
I used the strategy that you are describing, almost exactly. Even more gently. But it didn't work. She was offended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone give a good example of what the wife ought to say? Assuming that she likes the chair and isn’t interested in doing any additional shopping, what is a reasonable response to her DH saying that he doesn’t like the chair and wants to shop together?
"I honestly thought you would like it. Anyway, I am tired of searching, and I am going to buy it. I told you I was searching earlier, and you waited this long for your input. You should let me know your preference earlier next time."
"Stop whining and do it yourself next time or offer suggestions earlier rather than criticize all the effort I have put in."
I have used these, but it is easy for me to say these because my husband knows exactly what I am talking about.
Sometimes, if the issue/purchase is more important to him than it is to me I indulge his complaints and try to figure out what he wants.
.She is the bio mother. First wife.
I've been in a number of long-term relationships and have not run into this particular problem. I'm happy with my marriage, but frustrated that my wife leaves me with little room to have a different opinion. If our opinions differ, my wife seems to take it as an insult.
I enjoy discussions and debates and differences of opinion -- it makes life more interesting, and can make a relationship more fun. But my wife would prefer, I think, that she and I move in complete unison. This simply isn't possible. There are no two human beings who so precisely align