Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 09:12     Subject: Re:What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:He made dinner, he made a mistake, and all anybody could do was point out the one mistake he made.

He made a big deal about the one mistake he made instead of just scraping it off and saying hey thanks for making dinner. I’m gonna scrape the top off because it’s a little burnt.

I’ve made dinner over 4000 and I still might burn something. Sometimes they make the rice and it’s a little undercooked or sometimes it’s a little overcooked.

That’s life just freaking eat. What’s good and don’t eat. What’s not good.

What I don’t understand is why you have to make a big deal about it.

Yes, exactly (and +1 to PP above as well).
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 08:05     Subject: Re:What is this behavior pattern?

He made dinner, he made a mistake, and all anybody could do was point out the one mistake he made.

He made a big deal about the one mistake he made instead of just scraping it off and saying hey thanks for making dinner. I’m gonna scrape the top off because it’s a little burnt.

I’ve made dinner over 4000 and I still might burn something. Sometimes they make the rice and it’s a little undercooked or sometimes it’s a little overcooked.

That’s life just freaking eat. What’s good and don’t eat. What’s not good.

What I don’t understand is why you have to make a big deal about it.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 08:02     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Ha! You should have my MIL. I hosted Thanksgiving years ago and was so focused on everything else that I ended up burning the turkey. I was on the verge of tears and DH did his best to carve the charred parts off, but the taste was unmistakeable, and MIL was relentless. DH denied that it was burned and even had seconds (!) but each denial prompted MIL to dig in further. It was awful, because it was one of my first times hosting and I was just devastated.

We’ve rotated hosting over the years, but MIL brings it up almost every year. “Don’t let Larla near the turkey” or “See Larlo? That’s what burned turkey tastes like.”

So OP, maybe he burned dinner, and maybe he’s embarrassed by it. And maybe you can have some grace.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:58     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

So he gaslights (in the truest sense of the word) and you all walk on eggshells? I feel bad for your kids.

Is this how he gets sex too?

Unattractive and undesirable bully. And you, OP, are training your kids to be doormats. Just awful.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:55     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:Lying, excuses, inability to apologize, gets angry when asked what happened, changes the subject, starts personally attacking others who ask, raises his voice to avoid answering anything, etc.


This is huge, negative issue in a person.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:53     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Like flat out blamed them for things HE did wrong or forgot.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:53     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:This is my family situation. It's dismissive avoidant attachment type. My kids are both very good at accepting responsibility, repairing, and moving on. My biggest issue is after a huge tantrum, there is no repair. He just act like everything is normal. I have been sending my husband videos and specifically pointing out the behavior. If he doesn't change, we will divorce once the kids go to college.


This. Same. Working in it with the kids. He has damaged the relationship with them too.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:52     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:OP men arent going to call out his bad cooking. He doesnt throw parties for other men or women where he's judged on the food he makes. Its difficult for men to care too much about bad cooking because most of them don't have other people judging them.


It's not about the cooking. The fact that she talked about everyone avoiding his tantrum means that this is a pattern of behavior for all things.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:27     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

OP men arent going to call out his bad cooking. He doesnt throw parties for other men or women where he's judged on the food he makes. Its difficult for men to care too much about bad cooking because most of them don't have other people judging them.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 07:25     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Weird that you are posting this here seemingly as validation that you are right.

This doesn’t sound like a man “lying,” it sounds like someone trying not to get dunked on by his own family. He burned dinner. That’s not a character flaw. When the response is a group stare-down and commentary from everyone at the table, people get defensive and dig in. The real issue isn’t the breadcrumbs, it’s a family dynamic where one mistake turns into a referendum on competence, and then a wife who races to DCUM.

This. Feeling sad for your children, yourself, and the future—over a burned dinner topping—is humorously overdramatic, OP.

If you’re a good cook, offer advice at a calmer moment. Otherwise scrape off the breadcrumbs (which can be fickle) and offer a little grace.

(It sounds like the instructions called for cooking the chicken and breadcrumbs together, which was too high/long for the breadcrumbs. Probably better to toast separately.)


I think OP was sad about living with someone who lies after they make a mistake. Not about the meal.

There are people who like doing things they aren't good at or who have few skills and you just have to put up with their ineptitude. Most men don't cook. OP probably needs to learn how to cook herself.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 06:33     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

This is my family situation. It's dismissive avoidant attachment type. My kids are both very good at accepting responsibility, repairing, and moving on. My biggest issue is after a huge tantrum, there is no repair. He just act like everything is normal. I have been sending my husband videos and specifically pointing out the behavior. If he doesn't change, we will divorce once the kids go to college.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 06:21     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:Weird that you are posting this here seemingly as validation that you are right.

This doesn’t sound like a man “lying,” it sounds like someone trying not to get dunked on by his own family. He burned dinner. That’s not a character flaw. When the response is a group stare-down and commentary from everyone at the table, people get defensive and dig in. The real issue isn’t the breadcrumbs, it’s a family dynamic where one mistake turns into a referendum on competence, and then a wife who races to DCUM.

This. Feeling sad for your children, yourself, and the future—over a burned dinner topping—is humorously overdramatic, OP.

If you’re a good cook, offer advice at a calmer moment. Otherwise scrape off the breadcrumbs (which can be fickle) and offer a little grace.

(It sounds like the instructions called for cooking the chicken and breadcrumbs together, which was too high/long for the breadcrumbs. Probably better to toast separately.)
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 05:01     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Did he eat the burnt breadcrumbs? Maybe he prefers burnt toast. So he is a bad cook. Move on.
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 04:53     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Don’t cry over spilled milk. Or burnt breadcrumbs
Anonymous
Post 02/08/2026 00:48     Subject: What is this behavior pattern?

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Crap like this is why Im over men


Woman here. I equally suspect men would say the same about women, vice versa.


Except no wife is gonna gaslight her family about dinner being burned or not.