Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:anxiety/ childhood trauma involving illness
My guess was anxiety as well. It’s not always manifested in a nice way.
Anonymous wrote:Write down everything you did for him while he's sick and give it to him and say that you expect the same care back.
Anonymous wrote:anxiety/ childhood trauma involving illness
Anonymous wrote:I would divorce over this. This is the guy who leaves you when you get cancer.
Anonymous wrote:Depends on whether this is just part of a larger pattern and whether he can discuss it honestly when you tell him it hurts your feelings.
My xDH did/does this. It’s like he specifically amps up the nastiness at the moment I am most vulnerable. He also does it to our child. He appears to have a total inability to support others when they need him. After years of taking my sick kid to the doctor or ER in an uber by myself and being the only parent caring for our child when sick, you can imagine how our relationship deteriorated.
Part of the issue is plain selfishness and lack of empathy. But another part is being affirmatively triggered into hostility when he saw us sick. If I had to guess, I would say it was part of his overall inability to deal with any sort of demand or conflict - he saw a sick family member as making a demand on him and it made him angry.
Anonymous wrote:My husband was similar and it took some time/energy to figure out but he was triggered him based on bad history with his mother. Once he figured that out his behavior totally shifted. Absent something like that, your DH’s behavior is not cool.
Anonymous wrote:I would divorce over this. This is the guy who leaves you when you get cancer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP there was a thread on the parenting forum (I think) a while back about some mom feeling annoyed when her family is sick. Basically it was because her mom treated her that way when she was a child. I had a similar experience and I have to control the annoyance I feel when my kids or husband get sick. So to answer your question, look into his childhood.
np.. sigh.. this explains my own life and reactions so much. I have had to learn to be a better parent over the course of 20 years. I cringe when I think about some of the way I parented when the kids were younger.
I'm going through a divorce so I've been doing a lot of reading, and one exercise that really stood out to me was to imagine if you had been properly parented by healthy and whole people. And imagine if your parents had been parented by healthy and whole people, and so on. Since I'm divorcing, I applied it to my STBX too, since I am lucky that I was parented pretty well. It really helps me to have compassion for myself and my parents and my ex. I hope you can have compassion for yourself too. <3