Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I left, but it wasn't easy. Even his family couldn't get him under control.
Are you sure he wants to be married? Are you sure he is not on spectrum?
+1. I'm 10 years post-divorce now and he's still a disregulated, occasionally explosive mess. He _still_ hasn't gone to a therapist or acknowledged that he has some sort of mental illness. And I still suspect he's also on the spectrum.
I had to get out because his awful engagement patterns were visibly affecting our grade schooler. I stayed on as long as I could, but there are some things worse than divorce and a child witnessing his father's explosive, narcissicistic rage (and thus living in fear and walking on eggshells) is one of them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is the word “fight” in quotation marks? A fight suggests hostilities on both sides so it would be helpful to know what YOU said and did too before accepting at face value your vague complaints about him being mean or “dysregulated” [sic].
Because it's so far out of bounds for fight in my view. It was more like an abusive emotional attack. We were having an ordinary level disagreement. I had asked if he needed a break from the kids or how I could help, before things escalated. Assume massive emotional dysregulation on his part for purposes of advice.
You ARE going to have to share details for us to assess this because right now all you are doing is offering vague descriptions of his behavior and making weird misspelled clinical diagnoses and positioning yourself as victim when there was obviously a conflict, which points to a dynamic that needs to be examined. He very well may be abusive but it’s still a dynamic and it would be useful to know what role you play in that dynamic.
What, specifically, was the “fight” about and what happened?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have young, dependent children, then abuse toward you affects the children as well.
Yes, so what do I do? Where do I go from here?
Anonymous wrote:I left, but it wasn't easy. Even his family couldn't get him under control.
Are you sure he wants to be married? Are you sure he is not on spectrum?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you may have said some extremely patronizing things, your DH reacted negatively, and now you’re trying to crowdsource the idea that you are above reproach and he’s all to blame. Work in therapy on how you communicate with your DH and others first.
Nope, I provided no such details. I didn't write this in a way to provide "my side." I just would like you to assume what I'm telling you is true. And what do I do about it. Other than be a doormat, or leave. Starting with therapy for me.
Of course you would. But I for one am not going to take you at face value.
So don’t. Who cares what you think?
She does. She asked for my opinion. What is your problem?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a big fan of grey-rocking abusive people you have to continue contact with on some level. Read up on it.
Grey rock him. Consult an attorney about like equity sit and child custody and support. Get into individual therapy and use that to focus on what you want your life to be like based on the assumption that this is his normal and it will stay the same or get worse. Spend less time jointly with him. Spend more time separately with the kids so you can strengthen your bond with them and model healthy adult child interaction. Build your personal network of support. Invest in your career/earning power.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you may have said some extremely patronizing things, your DH reacted negatively, and now you’re trying to crowdsource the idea that you are above reproach and he’s all to blame. Work in therapy on how you communicate with your DH and others first.
Nope, I provided no such details. I didn't write this in a way to provide "my side." I just would like you to assume what I'm telling you is true. And what do I do about it. Other than be a doormat, or leave. Starting with therapy for me.
Of course you would. But I for one am not going to take you at face value.
So don’t. Who cares what you think?
She does. She asked for my opinion. What is your problem?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you may have said some extremely patronizing things, your DH reacted negatively, and now you’re trying to crowdsource the idea that you are above reproach and he’s all to blame. Work in therapy on how you communicate with your DH and others first.
Nope, I provided no such details. I didn't write this in a way to provide "my side." I just would like you to assume what I'm telling you is true. And what do I do about it. Other than be a doormat, or leave. Starting with therapy for me.
Of course you would. But I for one am not going to take you at face value.
So don’t. Who cares what you think?
Anonymous wrote:I'm a big fan of grey-rocking abusive people you have to continue contact with on some level. Read up on it.
Grey rock him. Consult an attorney about like equity sit and child custody and support. Get into individual therapy and use that to focus on what you want your life to be like based on the assumption that this is his normal and it will stay the same or get worse. Spend less time jointly with him. Spend more time separately with the kids so you can strengthen your bond with them and model healthy adult child interaction. Build your personal network of support. Invest in your career/earning power.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It sounds like you may have said some extremely patronizing things, your DH reacted negatively, and now you’re trying to crowdsource the idea that you are above reproach and he’s all to blame. Work in therapy on how you communicate with your DH and others first.
Nope, I provided no such details. I didn't write this in a way to provide "my side." I just would like you to assume what I'm telling you is true. And what do I do about it. Other than be a doormat, or leave. Starting with therapy for me.
Of course you would. But I for one am not going to take you at face value.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is my dh. He has adhd and takes every piece of advice or question as a personal attack. He lashed out and unloads, realizes he is wrong, but then never apologizes and just acts like everything is okay the next morning. I have learned to stop engaging him when he gets like that. If I don't engage with him, it doesn't escalate.
Yep +1
Sounds like my DH. Don’t engage.