Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For big things or things that are part of who they are, I agree. For small things, if there is love and respect there, they will make the changes. DH and I both had habits that bothered the other. We love and respect each other deeply. We changed those habits (things like leaving dishes out, not closing cabinets, not putting things away when I was done with them, etc)
To me, the love and respect would mitigate toward just not saying anything. Like is it really worth starting a fight over someone not closing a cabinet door?
Pp here. A fight? We've literally never fought over any of this stuff. It's a simple "hey, when you're done with the vacuum cleaner can you please just put it away instead of leaving it where it was used?" (Actual quote). And then "yeah ..sorry. ". And then guess what? Next time I vacuumed I put it away!
DH is the same. If I ask him to not to something /do something....he does!
I have no idea why you would assume any of these would lead to fights or disagreements.
Yea thinking of it from the POV of the requesting spouse, asking for that would either get a dirty look or an, oh sure, but then nothing would change. So it makes more sense to just either tolerate the vaccuum being out or put it away myself. There's no point in asking someone to do something that they don't already do on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For big things or things that are part of who they are, I agree. For small things, if there is love and respect there, they will make the changes. DH and I both had habits that bothered the other. We love and respect each other deeply. We changed those habits (things like leaving dishes out, not closing cabinets, not putting things away when I was done with them, etc)
To me, the love and respect would mitigate toward just not saying anything. Like is it really worth starting a fight over someone not closing a cabinet door?
It doesn't have to be a fight. The love and respect is what moderates the response to the request- why would you get angry at someone you love about a cabinet door? Ignoring it because you love them AND are afraid they are going to fight with you is the actual problem.