Anonymous wrote:You HAVE to talk to him about this before it blows up. Speak kindly and lovingly but you need to get him to stop before you start to hate him.
Anonymous wrote:Op consider yourself lucky 🍀 your dh wants to talk to you. In many marriages women complain DHs don’t talk have any conversations beyond logistics etc and can’t emotionally connect. Consider yourself lucky. That being said he does need to give you some alone time
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[google]Anonymous wrote:Could it be Aspergers?
My DH comes to talk to me just when I’m in the throne, trying to do my business quietly.
^correction: sitting on the throne
You view your role as being a queen with a throne? Jesus
She’s talking about him interrupting her when she’s on the toilet…
Anonymous wrote:I am a working mom with two little kids, one of whom has special needs. I love my DH dearly but I am having this recurring issue where he will not allow me to have alone time, basically ever. No matter what I am trying to do, whether it is tending to the kids (and trying to listen to them, talk to them, etc), working from home, washing dishes, attempting to listen to a podcast, reading a book, he is terrible at noticing that I am doing something else and letting me do it. Example is when I am working from home, he will talk in the room and just start talking at me about whatever topic floats into his head. Or I finally sit down after getting the kids to bed, open my book, and he starts talking.
It is driving me nuts. He does not take well to me kindly saying, hey, I am in the middle of something - can we talk later?
My work days and time with my kids I am "on" pretty much all the time, and I need more quiet and time to relax and unwind without focusing on whatever he wants to talk about. I am pretty good about making time for him but this feels like an immature and frankly kind of selfish behavior. In the meantime, if he has a TV show he wants to watch, he makes a big production about "hey this is my TV night" and goes and watches it. It has not always been like this and I am honestly not sure where this comes from. His friends kind of suck so I think he lacks people to talk to maybe?
AITA for being annoyed by this? Any tips for dealing with it?
Anonymous wrote:I have the same problem. Usually he needed my help or wanted me to do something right then. My problem was I would drop everything and do it. Now I say, firmly and sometimes in an annoyed tone, I will when I’m finished or I’m doing something but I can later. He also would take up space like he’ll need to do something in the kitchen as I’m doing something and expect me to move. I now say, let me finish this first. He does not object to this.
My take is that he just expects to take up the space whenever he needs it, his needs come first, he’s not interrupting, he’s just doing the next thing, whereas as a woman I learned to adapt, move aside and be amenable. I think this kind of adaptability never occurred to him but as I said, now that I say something, he goes along with it.
Anonymous wrote:Is there any time you aren’t doing something? It seems like you just don’t want your husband to talk to you?
Anonymous wrote:My DH is similar. I lock him out of spaces when I need to be alone. He is able to open the door with a coat hanger and still comes in but at least it buys me some time and peace.
No answers here. He gets hurt and defensive when I say that to him also and I’m not wanting to fight over and over again.
Anonymous wrote:I have the same problem. Usually he needed my help or wanted me to do something right then. My problem was I would drop everything and do it. Now I say, firmly and sometimes in an annoyed tone, I will when I’m finished or I’m doing something but I can later. He also would take up space like he’ll need to do something in the kitchen as I’m doing something and expect me to move. I now say, let me finish this first. He does not object to this.
My take is that he just expects to take up the space whenever he needs it, his needs come first, he’s not interrupting, he’s just doing the next thing, whereas as a woman I learned to adapt, move aside and be amenable. I think this kind of adaptability never occurred to him but as I said, now that I say something, he goes along with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[google]Anonymous wrote:Could it be Aspergers?
My DH comes to talk to me just when I’m in the throne, trying to do my business quietly.
^correction: sitting on the throne
You view your role as being a queen with a throne? Jesus