Anonymous wrote:7:58, seems to me you're a moron. Good luck with that! If there was ever a time in our history to thrive as one, you've certainly chosen well!
No affair. Picks up our kid from aftercare and is home with her all when I get home a couple hours later. He goes to the gym a few times a week, but I can see that that is true because the account keeps a record of card scans, purchases, etc. We work at the same institution and I see him in all the places at all the times he should be. Don't have access to his phone (nor does he to mine; the institution we work for makes us keep our phones locked to use outlook and all the other crap we need) but he doesn't seem cagey with it or anything.
HOWEVER, [b]it does seem as though he doesn't like me anymore on a fundamental basis and I can't figure out why. I'd like to stay married because he's always been the better person, but this middle-aged bullshit that seems to have sprouted has got to go! The more I think about it, the more I think it 's a biochemical/neurological problem.
Anonymous wrote:I could have written this. My husband recently gave me a list of things I do wrong. They included things like “screw lids on properly or ask for help”. I spoke to a friend about it, and she suggested that 1). I don’t take it personally. 2). He is feeling lonely and ineffective and this is his way of dealing with it. 3). Reminding him that he has no control over me, and 4). Tell him he has to talk to his AA sponsor before this can be resolved.
I liked this. The idea of forcing him to take responsibility for this, and not letting him frame the argument as how bad it is that I screwed on the jar lid incorrectly, putting me on the defensive.
Good luck!
OP: nice to see that your husband is finally standing up for himself. Maybe he is seeing a therapist.
Anonymous wrote:OP: nice to see that your husband is finally standing up for himself. Maybe he is seeing a therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Are you taking care of his manly needs?
Anonymous wrote:I could have written this. My husband recently gave me a list of things I do wrong. They included things like “screw lids on properly or ask for help”. I spoke to a friend about it, and she suggested that 1). I don’t take it personally. 2). He is feeling lonely and ineffective and this is his way of dealing with it. 3). Reminding him that he has no control over me, and 4). Tell him he has to talk to his AA sponsor before this can be resolved.
I liked this. The idea of forcing him to take responsibility for this, and not letting him frame the argument as how bad it is that I screwed on the jar lid incorrectly, putting me on the defensive.
Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Sorry OP, but it’s possible he’s having an affair. He needs to find fault with you in order to justify it and not feel guilty. It’s one of the telltale signs.
Anonymous wrote:Add me to the affair camp.
A cheater doesn't want to think that he is a bad person, so he has to turn the betrayed spouse into someone who deserves betrayal. The spouse must be doing things wrong, or he wouldn't be cheating on her. Therefore, he will act as if she is causing all kinds of problems, and they are such a hassle to him.
www.survivinginfidelity.com has a Healing Library. You can read more about this phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:This isn’t normal behavior? I’ve been dealing with this on steroids, getting increasingly worse over 10 years.
Get therapy or get out, OP. It doesn’t get better.