Anonymous wrote:Op here. I’m not *really* contemplating divorce. DH is generally great, but he has undiagnosed ADHD. Between him and my ADHD teens, I’m about ready to leave them to their own devices for the summer, lol.
He has weed whacked purposely planted plants before, and I was upset, but he didn’t know so I gave him some slack. It is precisely why I pointed out these recent plantings, made sure he knew where they were and what they looked like, etc. He just wasn’t paying attention.
To answer a pp’s question, this particular bed had been cleared out. I removed a large invasive shrub and planted a native shrub along with these cardinal flowers in its place. While they are not yet large/established, they were the only things growing in the mulched bed. Like I said, he wasn’t paying attention.
Also, I do the majority of the yard work. He cuts the grass and occasionally weed whacks when he feels like it. I’m banning him from weed whacking from now on.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say he’s otherwise pretty great, but it is confusing how he could have done something so careless. This was important to you. He could have stopped and asked. I think it deserves a real apology from him.
But unless there are other examples of him acting thoughtlessly to you or things you care about, it’s not grounds for divorce.
He was already "very apologetic", which we can assume qualifies as a real apology if by "apologetic" OP means what those words mean.
I think there a difference between “sorry about the plants” and “I’m truly sorry and regretful that I didn’t pay attention to you when you told me something was important to you”
Anonymous wrote:Yes, it is grounds for divorce as DH has really soiled the bed.
Enough with the stupid puns...I think sunflowers look horrible in most gardens unless you have a very large plot that is nearly professionally landscaped (yeah...somehow they work in Martha Stewart's gardens).
Now, unlike your DH, I would tell you that I am weed whacking the sunflowers...ore more accurately...would warn you before you wasted the money to start.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say he’s otherwise pretty great, but it is confusing how he could have done something so careless. This was important to you. He could have stopped and asked. I think it deserves a real apology from him.
But unless there are other examples of him acting thoughtlessly to you or things you care about, it’s not grounds for divorce.
He was already "very apologetic", which we can assume qualifies as a real apology if by "apologetic" OP means what those words mean.
Anonymous wrote:You say he’s otherwise pretty great, but it is confusing how he could have done something so careless. This was important to you. He could have stopped and asked. I think it deserves a real apology from him.
But unless there are other examples of him acting thoughtlessly to you or things you care about, it’s not grounds for divorce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You say he’s otherwise pretty great, but it is confusing how he could have done something so careless. This was important to you. He could have stopped and asked. I think it deserves a real apology from him.
But unless there are other examples of him acting thoughtlessly to you or things you care about, it’s not grounds for divorce.
Even my gardener (who isn’t professionally trained but does garden as a full time job) sometimes mistakes intentional plantings for weeds or vice versa… usually leaving in weeds that we want removed. The difference between a plant and a weed is a weed is a plant you don’t want where it is. This is especially true of native wildflowers…
I’d cut the guy some slack - especially if the plants were wilted from the heat and not yet flowering they could easily look unintentional.
I’d be curious to know if the planting beds were pretty over run with actual weeds already…
Anonymous wrote:You say he’s otherwise pretty great, but it is confusing how he could have done something so careless. This was important to you. He could have stopped and asked. I think it deserves a real apology from him.
But unless there are other examples of him acting thoughtlessly to you or things you care about, it’s not grounds for divorce.