Anonymous wrote:How is your sex life?
Anonymous wrote:Our conversations look like this:
Me: Im thinking maybe we should go to the playground before dinner so DS can play.
DH: silence
Me: what do you think?
DH: silence
Me: Honey-did you hear me? Should we go to the park? Do you think we have time?
DH: silence
Me: (grouchy now) DH? Are you listening? What do you think? I’m going to take DS to the park. Are you coming?
DH: OK
Me: what does that mean? Yes or no? Should I just go with DS by myself? Or do you want to join us?
It’s maddening. This happens many times per week. Is there a diagnosis here or something? I find it extraordinarily rude but I don’t think he intends it that way. It’s not the silent treatment-he doesn’t seem obviously angry at me. I’ve tried asking him about it and told him how it makes me feel and it doesn’t feel like I’m gettinf through.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DS is like this diagnosis is ADD Inattentive and Expressive Language Disorder.
Partial solutions - touch his arm or say his name and make sure you have hos attention before you speak. Sometimes I have to physically go over and stand in front of him to get his attention.
Don’t bury the message in a lot of info or pleasantries, make you question short and simple. Don’t repeat a ton of times. Ask once when you have his attention, then carry on even if
he doesn’t respond.
Stop being angry and allowing it to affect your self-esteem. This is a him problem. When he doesn’t answer he misses out. If he gets angry about it, just state that you asked him and he didn’t respond so you moved on. It’s not your job to repeat yourself 40x a day.
Thank you for this explanation! My DD does this and I hate it but I suspect something similar to your DS is going on.
Anonymous wrote:My husband is like this, but amps it up a notch by then getting angry when I press that he hears me. OR then denies that I ever said/told him something. So i periodically unload on him that if he actually acknowledged I'm speaking to him it would avoid all of this. Doesn't make a difference obviously, because he continues to do it, but it makes me feel like I'm actually in the room and exists as a human being every now and then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A couple of thoughts. Don't walk up to him and start talking. Some people need time to disengage from their thoughts.
Also, why do you need affirmation of every plan? Just go to the park. Be more independent and you may get more attention.
Agreed. I would probably zone out too if DH had to involve me in every single decision he made. It would be exhausting and annoying.
Anonymous wrote:A couple of thoughts. Don't walk up to him and start talking. Some people need time to disengage from their thoughts.
Also, why do you need affirmation of every plan? Just go to the park. Be more independent and you may get more attention.
Anonymous wrote:My DS is like this diagnosis is ADD Inattentive and Expressive Language Disorder.
Partial solutions - touch his arm or say his name and make sure you have hos attention before you speak. Sometimes I have to physically go over and stand in front of him to get his attention.
Don’t bury the message in a lot of info or pleasantries, make you question short and simple. Don’t repeat a ton of times. Ask once when you have his attention, then carry on even if
he doesn’t respond.
Stop being angry and allowing it to affect your self-esteem. This is a him problem. When he doesn’t answer he misses out. If he gets angry about it, just state that you asked him and he didn’t respond so you moved on. It’s not your job to repeat yourself 40x a day.