Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because they're used to the old you. Ingrained dynamics between people are really hard to break. That's what happens when adult siblings return to the family home for the Holidays, and ancient rivalries and hierarchies resurface like no time has passed at all.
You will actually have to enact severe consequences for them to believe the new you, OP.
If you've kids, try couple's counseling where you two can learn civil and effective communication skills.
Everyone is used to me giving in, taking responsibility, taking on the work. I can't do it anymore. How do I get people to step up? Mostly the issue is H, when I tried to set boundaries, he started becoming aggressive and absuive (verbally, but still). I am thinking divorce is the only solution. It's been a year.
Anonymous wrote:So I recently started setting boundaries, but the main persons in my life don't respect them or become aggressive about them. I really try, but it's not working at all. The last resort would be to remove those people from my life but it's difficult because these people include H and other close family members. I see that the common denominator is me - I let people walk all over me, and people take advantage. So what should I do?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ forgot to mention: she supported all my educational goals, even if my dad di not. I went to an expensive grad school and she made sure I was able to go (she did not pay for it all as she did not have enough money, but she paid all she could).
Your mother cared about you but it sounds like she hurt herself to help you. That isn't what you should do or look up to. Your goal should not be to hurt yourself to take care of others. People who have boundaries understand the airline safety lesson about grabbing the oxygen mask before you help anyone else.
Anonymous wrote:If you divorce your husband, can you move your mom in with you and hire a nurse to care for her during your working hours? Kind of like a nanny for grandma?
Anonymous wrote:^ forgot to mention: she supported all my educational goals, even if my dad di not. I went to an expensive grad school and she made sure I was able to go (she did not pay for it all as she did not have enough money, but she paid all she could).