Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sound like my marriage, except we sleep in the same bed without touching. It’s pretty insane. Oh, and we spent so a family thing together on the weekends because his anxiety (which manifests as anger) makes him so miserable to be around.
Why do I stay? Because our kid is 6 and DH is SO moody and so angry all the time that I can’t sentence my kid to 50% of his time outside school alone with someone who gives him the silent treatment or rages at him. When he gets like that now, I try to clear us out of the house.
It’s miserable but I honestly don’t know what else I can do. I lived with a raging, moody, unpredictable mother. He was nothing like this when we dated. But it’s been years now and has y gotten better. I don’t want to live like this and I know it’s not good, but I feel like I’m choosing the least worst of two very bad options. Has anyone else been in a similar situation?
Sounds like your husband has undiagnosed ASD, what you are going through seems pretty typical for such a relationship
check this site https://theneurotypical.com/testimonials.php
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/spectrum-solutions/201006/what-everybody-ought-know-about-aspergers-and-marriage
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have one DS, age 4. DH and I have separate bedrooms and do separate things when DS is asleep. We eat all meals together. On weekends, we do a family activity day: museum, zoo, climbing gym, etc. and we alternate the other weekend day. DH are somewhat physically affectionate to each other in front of DS: back oats, brief hugs. How does something like this play out long-term? So far DS hasn't asked any questions. We don't plan on getting a divorce or moving out until DS it's in his 20s or maybe not at all because we will be very old and tired by then.
This will work until it doesn’t. It may last until he is out of the house or it may not. Have a plan now. Agree to things now, while you are working together and both sign it. I have seen this work until one or the other meets someone and then they want out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kids will figure this out in an instant
And realize mature adults often put their needs 2nd for their child... good.
Doesn't work long term. Kids are not stupid. Tension creates major anxiety in kids. Wait til they are teens. It's very rare for this to work long term.
If there were fighting or had contempt for each other, yeah, but according to OP there isn't tension.
OP thinks that for the next 16 years there will be no fighting or contempt? They must be Casper and Mildred Milquetoast!
Anonymous wrote:I don't think any of the commenters so far are "separated in place" according to the Virginia legal rules for doing so. If that matters to you - i.e., you want it to count as a "year of separation" for divorce purposes - you need to look closely at those rules.
Anonymous wrote:We have one DS, age 4. DH and I have separate bedrooms and do separate things when DS is asleep. We eat all meals together. On weekends, we do a family activity day: museum, zoo, climbing gym, etc. and we alternate the other weekend day. DH are somewhat physically affectionate to each other in front of DS: back oats, brief hugs. How does something like this play out long-term? So far DS hasn't asked any questions. We don't plan on getting a divorce or moving out until DS it's in his 20s or maybe not at all because we will be very old and tired by then.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kids will figure this out in an instant
And realize mature adults often put their needs 2nd for their child... good.
Doesn't work long term. Kids are not stupid. Tension creates major anxiety in kids. Wait til they are teens. It's very rare for this to work long term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sound like my marriage, except we sleep in the same bed without touching. It’s pretty insane. Oh, and we spent so a family thing together on the weekends because his anxiety (which manifests as anger) makes him so miserable to be around.
Why do I stay? Because our kid is 6 and DH is SO moody and so angry all the time that I can’t sentence my kid to 50% of his time outside school alone with someone who gives him the silent treatment or rages at him. When he gets like that now, I try to clear us out of the house.
It’s miserable but I honestly don’t know what else I can do. I lived with a raging, moody, unpredictable mother. He was nothing like this when we dated. But it’s been years now and has y gotten better. I don’t want to live like this and I know it’s not good, but I feel like I’m choosing the least worst of two very bad options. Has anyone else been in a similar situation?
Sounds like your husband has undiagnosed ASD, what you are going through seems pretty typical for such a relationship
check this site https://theneurotypical.com/testimonials.php
Anonymous wrote:Sound like my marriage, except we sleep in the same bed without touching. It’s pretty insane. Oh, and we spent so a family thing together on the weekends because his anxiety (which manifests as anger) makes him so miserable to be around.
Why do I stay? Because our kid is 6 and DH is SO moody and so angry all the time that I can’t sentence my kid to 50% of his time outside school alone with someone who gives him the silent treatment or rages at him. When he gets like that now, I try to clear us out of the house.
It’s miserable but I honestly don’t know what else I can do. I lived with a raging, moody, unpredictable mother. He was nothing like this when we dated. But it’s been years now and has y gotten better. I don’t want to live like this and I know it’s not good, but I feel like I’m choosing the least worst of two very bad options. Has anyone else been in a similar situation?
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like my actual marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kids will figure this out in an instant
And realize mature adults often put their needs 2nd for their child... good.
Doesn't work long term. Kids are not stupid. Tension creates major anxiety in kids. Wait til they are teens. It's very rare for this to work long term.
If there were fighting or had contempt for each other, yeah, but according to OP there isn't tension.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kids will figure this out in an instant
And realize mature adults often put their needs 2nd for their child... good.
Doesn't work long term. Kids are not stupid. Tension creates major anxiety in kids. Wait til they are teens. It's very rare for this to work long term.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:kids will figure this out in an instant
And realize mature adults often put their needs 2nd for their child... good.