Anonymous wrote:+100, except I was a bit older. I actually lost respect for my mom when I was a teen, for just letting my dad treat her like sh*t. I vowed to never let a man treat me that way.Anonymous wrote:OP I was around your daughter's age when my mother divorced my father who was like your husband. It was an amazing feeling having peace in the house at last.
Anonymous wrote:Can’t advise on the divorce part, but I would at least stop trying to coach or correct him unless something was very dangerous or impacted my kid. Let him make sparks in the microwave. Let him leave sour cream out of the recipe. If it sucks it’s on him. You’re going to clean up his messes either way, might as well avoid the nasty response that comes with it.
+100, except I was a bit older. I actually lost respect for my mom when I was a teen, for just letting my dad treat her like sh*t. I vowed to never let a man treat me that way.Anonymous wrote:OP I was around your daughter's age when my mother divorced my father who was like your husband. It was an amazing feeling having peace in the house at last.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t protect her. He will treat her better if you stay out of it because he will have to and not blame you. People with HFA often blame others to not take accountability themselves. They have rejection sensitivity because of high anxiety. You being part of the equation gives him an excuse to behave badly. When you are out of it, he will have more reason to behave well. If you want what is best for your daughter I think you let them bond in their own way. It won’t be a neurotypical way but it will hopefully be a loving relationship in the way he can achieve that. He probably only wants one weekend day a week or month anyway. Don’t sweat it.
OP here. PP, thanks much for your very useful viewpoint.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks everybody for your great input. It is really something to think about.
Regarding his job 3 hours away, that's in a bad area, so there was never any question of us moving there.
While he has cheated several times in the past, I don't think there is another person now.
Anonymous wrote:I think this man plans to divorce you and you should get your ducks in a row. It doesn’t matter how much you adore the house—it is no compensation at all for what you are experiencing.
You have to figure out how to get divorced in a way that will help him disengage more. Directly trying to box him out won’t work. But something might.
Anonymous wrote:You can’t protect her. He will treat her better if you stay out of it because he will have to and not blame you. People with HFA often blame others to not take accountability themselves. They have rejection sensitivity because of high anxiety. You being part of the equation gives him an excuse to behave badly. When you are out of it, he will have more reason to behave well. If you want what is best for your daughter I think you let them bond in their own way. It won’t be a neurotypical way but it will hopefully be a loving relationship in the way he can achieve that. He probably only wants one weekend day a week or month anyway. Don’t sweat it.
Anonymous wrote:I would have let him blow up that microwave.
Anonymous wrote:Let go of the house! Separating it into two units with drywall is not the answer.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like he wants a divorce.