Of course do that only away from the kids OR you can write it out with a thick bold marker and flash it to him when the kids aren't looking.
Anonymous wrote:He said that he hopes I end up in a wheelchair. Not even sure why he was so mad, but the argument was no where near serious enough to ever say something like that. Especially considering that he knows my illness has progressed as of December. I am so hurt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My mother has MS, and sometimes we joke about it, as a family. It's better to laugh than cry about it!
You seem a tad on the sensitive side, OP. The ex should not succeed in getting a rise out of you so easily.
Given the fact that OP seems genuinely upset about it, why would you assume it was some lighthearted teasing?
Seems like you are the one who is a tad on the insensitive and socially inept side. You should not make assumptions or be so flippant to someone who's quiet clearly upset
Sigh. If you knew how to read, you'd have read I understood that perfectly.
OP has MS. Life is difficult for her, and will be for the foreseeable future. Bullying from the ex should be water off a duck's back. My aunts, back in the day when MS was less known, said the most horrible things to my mother: told her she was feigning so that she wouldn't have to work, told her she was crazy, accused her of having AIDS, etc... Unfortunately, being chronically ill brings this galaxy of social issues that you might not have expected, and you get to find out who your real supporters are. In my mother's case, it was her boyfriend, who carried her up and down the stairs to their apartment and married her.
Tough love, OP: you'll have to be stronger than that. Your real supporters will come, but you have to be strong as well.
Anonymous wrote:I have a Ph.D. and would never tease my wife.
Anonymous wrote:OP here, there's nothing funny or cool about using a debilitating illness as a jab. He is my exhusband and we have kids
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My mother has MS, and sometimes we joke about it, as a family. It's better to laugh than cry about it!
You seem a tad on the sensitive side, OP. The ex should not succeed in getting a rise out of you so easily.
Given the fact that OP seems genuinely upset about it, why would you assume it was some lighthearted teasing?
Seems like you are the one who is a tad on the insensitive and socially inept side. You should not make assumptions or be so flippant to someone who's quiet clearly upset
Sigh. If you knew how to read, you'd have read I understood that perfectly.
OP has MS. Life is difficult for her, and will be for the foreseeable future. Bullying from the ex should be water off a duck's back. My aunts, back in the day when MS was less known, said the most horrible things to my mother: told her she was feigning so that she wouldn't have to work, told her she was crazy, accused her of having AIDS, etc... Unfortunately, being chronically ill brings this galaxy of social issues that you might not have expected, and you get to find out who your real supporters are. In my mother's case, it was her boyfriend, who carried her up and down the stairs to their apartment and married her.
Tough love, OP: you'll have to be stronger than that. Your real supporters will come, but you have to be strong as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
My mother has MS, and sometimes we joke about it, as a family. It's better to laugh than cry about it!
You seem a tad on the sensitive side, OP. The ex should not succeed in getting a rise out of you so easily.
Given the fact that OP seems genuinely upset about it, why would you assume it was some lighthearted teasing?
Seems like you are the one who is a tad on the insensitive and socially inept side. You should not make assumptions or be so flippant to someone who's quiet clearly upset
Sigh. If you knew how to read, you'd have read I understood that perfectly.
OP has MS. Life is difficult for her, and will be for the foreseeable future. Bullying from the ex should be water off a duck's back. My aunts, back in the day when MS was less known, said the most horrible things to my mother: told her she was feigning so that she wouldn't have to work, told her she was crazy, accused her of having AIDS, etc... Unfortunately, being chronically ill brings this galaxy of social issues that you might not have expected, and you get to find out who your real supporters are. In my mother's case, it was her boyfriend, who carried her up and down the stairs to their apartment and married her.
Tough love, OP: you'll have to be stronger than that. Your real supporters will come, but you have to be strong as well.
Anonymous wrote:He said that he hopes I end up in a wheelchair. Not even sure why he was so mad, but the argument was no where near serious enough to ever say something like that. Especially considering that he knows my illness has progressed as of December. I am so hurt.