Anonymous wrote:Congrats, you married your father, turned into your mother, and are perpetuating this cycle of dysfunction to your children.
I’m not sure what to tell you because people don’t change (very rare) and you are unwilling to divorce over this.
The best advice is probably to grey rock, ignore, spend time with kids and friends outside of the home. I would probably start laughing at him or teasing him, and I have seen this tactic employed successfully in one high earning household. But the DH in this was more of a traditional cantankerous group, and not a mean explosive bully. Be careful you don’t want to end up dead or injured.
Anonymous wrote:Ignore them.
Emotionally detach
Hang out with friends and normal people more
Gray divorce
Anonymous wrote:Ugh I’m rereading my post and I realize I sound exactly like my mom. I tend to make up a hundred reasons why he might be mad at me for something.
It probably has nothing to do with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Look, we’re not robots. None of us are going to be happy all the time. Some crankiness is okay.
But what’s not okay is:
1. Being so grumpy all the time that people walk on eggshells
2. Not making repairs to the relationship afterwards.
Yes, sometimes I get irritated and snap. But it’s only every couple months, and I always apologize afterwards.
Defaulting to verbally expressing your anger and not apologizing afterwards isn’t okay.
I wouldn’t say he’s grumpy all the time. And when I called him out on his grumpiness, he did apologize.
Honestly our kids also have been extra hard this past week. We have a teen and tween, and let me tell you, that handling that age is not for the weak.
So maybe it has something to do with that as well.
It’s just hard to figure out because the frustration ends up getting broadcasted so broadly and in seemingly unrelated ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I give him a nice meal and let him watch sports on TV or go out with friends. Usually takes the edge off things.
Men don’t do the equivalent of this when women are grumpy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t like these posters telling OP to basically just deal with it. Clearly his behavior is hurting OP, and if it’s made worse because of her childhood family dynamic, that doesn’t make it fine for him to be all brooding and angry.
A man being a “verbally expressive angry guy” feels scary because it often IS. If you feel “very on edge like he’s going to blow up” that’s bad for your health and he should care enough to change the angry/moody behavior. I am sure if it were occasional moodiness like we all have that you wouldn’t be posting about it.
F this guy and I’m so sick of the excuses for men with poor emotional control.
It’s tough to tell because I hear both sides. DH tells me I think he’s yelling and angry when he’s clearly not, it’s just his normal demeanor.
There’s been times when he rants and yells so loud our neighbors outside could hear. But he says that’s just him being expressive, not actually angry.