Anonymous wrote:OP here. Absolutely wasn't snooping but I don't car to convince the haters otherwise.
Yes the notes are accurate but I'm allowed to live in my house too. I'm not his guest. Yes, I will occasionally be messy and yes my stuff will sit on the dining room table for a week while I'm working 8-6, raising three kids and getting them to and from sports/events. That's life.
My instinct is to call him out on his little notes. I find it very... unmasculine
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Absolutely wasn't snooping but I don't car to convince the haters otherwise.
Yes the notes are accurate but I'm allowed to live in my house too. I'm not his guest. Yes, I will occasionally be messy and yes my stuff will sit on the dining room table for a week while I'm working 8-6, raising three kids and getting them to and from sports/events. That's life.
My instinct is to call him out on his little notes. I find it very... unmasculine
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did something similar when I felt neglected in my marriage. In my case, the root problem was our sex life. I started documenting the times we had sex or I tried initiating unsuccessfully, just so I'd know I wasn't imagining it. This led to me also documenting things relevant to her excuses about sex -- her health status, if she was complaining about not feeling good; how much sleep we were getting respectively, if she was complaining about being tired; the types and amount of work/chores I was doing, if she was complaining about being overworked.
This wasn't especially healthy or productive, but that was the reason I was doing it.
So how did keeping an aspie spreadsheet work out for you? Did you wind up getting more sex when you showed her the numbers?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Have you been moody or nagging lately? Maybe he just wants proof if you snap at him for things. Seems way too time consuming though. That would bother me to death and I would just have to straight up ask him about it!
This.
I think he is gathering info to make a point. What and how that point will be used is hard to tell. Not putting your sweaters away is not fodder for a divorce case, IMO.
FWIW, my partner tends to gaslight me and deny things he's said, things he's done/hasn't done and then tends to try to change his story. I have jotted things down in the past for my own sanity.
This just came up again. He tends to be a workaholic and claims he wants to change that. I asked him what his definitive work hours are. He said 5 p.m. is his official quitting time. I repeated and said, "Your work day officially ends at 5 p.m., correct?" He said yes. I jotted a note on my calendar. (FWIW, his employer has ZERO expectation of anyone staying past normal work hours since they pay hourly and the work load is not heavy.)
Yesterday he came home later and I said, "Oh, you worked late today." He said, "No, it's my normal time." I stood firm and pushed back, telling him point blank he told me in June that his normal work hours were until 5 p.m. When I pushed, he finally admitted that yes, he was supposed to leave at 5 but wanted to finish up with something. I've had to do this with other things as well, simply because I got tired of arguing with him.
Sadly, I have had to resort to this tactic simply because he refuses to EVER be wrong about anything. OP, is it possible you might have this same personality trait?
So out of curiosity what’s the point of this whole exchange? It sounds like you just want to win or prove him wrong? Over working a little late, which seems like a normal thing to do? I guess I don’t get the point, even if he said something 7 months ago, of demanding that he acknowledge that. It sounds like OPs DH is maybe the same way. Sounds like an unpleasant way to live - waiting for your spouse to pounce on you.
The point is obvious - do you even know what gaslighting is??? When someone continuously obfuscates or challenges, corrects or criticizes, then taking notes can be a means of ensuring you are not imagining things.
Anonymous wrote:I think I’d become addicted to reading his notes.
A weekly report card of sorts. I’d have to experiment what got me an A, versus what made me score low. Takes notes on his notes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is what I would do if I felt like I was being gaslit during arguments.
It's not great OP. Whatever reason he feels like he needs to do this - not great.
This is what I think too. He feels the need to actually document what he is doing and your reactions. I would bet he feels you are gaslighting him in arguments. He needs proof because he feels crazy later when you deny and reject everything he says.
Not great at all.