Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what girlfriends are for.
+1. When my wife tells me stuff, I assume there is a point to the exercise - that she wants me to do something with the information she is conveying. If she just wants me to absorb sound, it seems like a waste of time. The wall would be just as effective at having sound waves bounce off.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how men don't understand this concept. When my husband's dad died, and he was sad and expressed this sadness, I listened and empathised. How shitty would he have felt if I said, "well, everyone's parents' die; time will make you feel better; be patient; try to relax," or any other totally unhelpful comments like this. It's not rocket science.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how men don't understand this concept. When my husband's dad died, and he was sad and expressed this sadness, I listened and empathised. How shitty would he have felt if I said, "well, everyone's parents' die; time will make you feel better; be patient; try to relax," or any other totally unhelpful comments like this. It's not rocket science.
Anonymous wrote:I'm still having trouble really grasping the concept. Is "invalidating your feelings" conceptually different from "disagreeing with you"?
Anonymous wrote:Maybe you two can talk about this, about how women need to just vent, and it helps them feel better, and that men perceive it as presenting a practical problem, which stresses them.
You should then always preface your venting with a warning reminder to him that it's just venting, and that he needs to keep his boundaries in check and remember you're you and just blowing off steam, and that it's not his problem to solve. His task is not to solve anything, but just to be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am a happy and optimistic person 85% of the time, let's say. But sometimes I want to complain about difficult circumstances with no immediate solution, stress, or other discomfort and to be heard and understood. My husband has a very hard time not taking on my feelings, so to speak, and he frequently dismisses them or tries to talk me out of them using logic so that he can avoid feeling bad himself. He has a really hard time understanding this concept: I just need to be listened to and heard sometimes.
This pattern also emerges when I talk about positive things sometimes. I might say "oh, I'd really love to go to x place someday in the future or work towards y goal" and he experiences it as a stressful request, whereas for me it might be 100% a fantasy that I just want to share.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
He sounds emotionally immature. I had an ex like this and it was so annoying because he was always invalidating my feelings and opinions because he had to be right about everything all off the time because he was insecure and needed to feel insecure. I married man who is the opposite and I'm so much happier.
Anonymous wrote:I am a happy and optimistic person 85% of the time, let's say. But sometimes I want to complain about difficult circumstances with no immediate solution, stress, or other discomfort and to be heard and understood. My husband has a very hard time not taking on my feelings, so to speak, and he frequently dismisses them or tries to talk me out of them using logic so that he can avoid feeling bad himself. He has a really hard time understanding this concept: I just need to be listened to and heard sometimes.
This pattern also emerges when I talk about positive things sometimes. I might say "oh, I'd really love to go to x place someday in the future or work towards y goal" and he experiences it as a stressful request, whereas for me it might be 100% a fantasy that I just want to share.
Does anyone have any suggestions?
Anonymous wrote:What does it mean to have one's feelings "validated"? You want him to say "you are right to feel this way"? What if you aren't?