Anonymous wrote:DH is an engineer and I swear sometimes he's got some kind of social disorder. He's wicked smart but his emotional IQ is really low. Introverted with little tolerance/empathy for things he doesn't understand, which is basically anything that isn't concrete and proved fact-based lol
Overall he's a good husband, great provider. In the beginning, his social awkwardness was endearing because I could tell he was trying but now that he doesn't try so much, it can be off putting. Even still, he can be very sweet and for the most part he's willing to put forth effort to do the things that make me happy (listening to my stories, complimenting me every once in a while, and not correcting me all the time).
We don't have children (yet?). I'm a bit nervous but I think we might be a good balance as far as personalities go and not completely ruin a kid *fingers crossed*
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband's an engineer, and he's pretty rad.
Mine is an engineer in a specialty field & he over analyzes everything, but otherwise he's great.
Same here. One question and the answer becomes a book.![]()
Great husband, great father, excessive natural energy so he's fun. And funny.
Anonymous wrote:DH is an engineer and I swear sometimes he's got some kind of social disorder. He's wicked smart but his emotional IQ is really low. Introverted with little tolerance/empathy for things he doesn't understand, which is basically anything that isn't concrete and proved fact-based lol
Overall he's a good husband, great provider. In the beginning, his social awkwardness was endearing because I could tell he was trying but now that he doesn't try so much, it can be off putting. Even still, he can be very sweet and for the most part he's willing to put forth effort to do the things that make me happy (listening to my stories, complimenting me every once in a while, and not correcting me all the time).
We don't have children (yet?). I'm a bit nervous but I think we might be a good balance as far as personalities go and not completely ruin a kid *fingers crossed*
Anonymous wrote:The catch is that many are socially awkward. You may end up not only being a spouse, but also acting as their mother in some ways. That's a turn off for some women.
STEM guys tend to be argumentative and have a hard time seeing others' points of view, especially if they deem that you're not acting in a "rational" manner. Appeals to emotion don't work with them, even though life sometimes calls for that. All they understand is rationality.
Anonymous wrote:I think some of you are thinking too stereotypically. DH is an engineer with 2 masters degrees in EE and physics. He is very logical, loves to figure out problems and is very smart. He reads math books (I actually don't even understand the titles!) at night before bed. Loves working on cars and small engines. He's even rewired our HVAC and he preprograms circuit boards in appliances and such when they stop working.
But... he's still extremely social. He's not nerdy at all or socially stunted. He loves to dance and go out. We love visiting museums together. I'm extremely creative and he does value that in me, just like I value how perfect everything is that he does and how he fixes everything.
He's a great husband. But he wouldn't make enough to support a family on his salary. He makes like 110k and is top of his field. I think in 20 years he will be at like 140k.
Anonymous wrote:The catch is that many are socially awkward. You may end up not only being a spouse, but also acting as their mother in some ways. That's a turn off for some women.
STEM guys tend to be argumentative and have a hard time seeing others' points of view, especially if they deem that you're not acting in a "rational" manner. Appeals to emotion don't work with them, even though life sometimes calls for that. All they understand is rationality.
Anonymous wrote:Literal thinkers. They will take what you say at face-value. Mean what you say. Say what you mean. Say it exactly. Don't expect attention to nuance, figurative language - ie don't expect poetry or attention to frivolous detail. If observing "special" dates is important - anniversary, etc - give them reminders.
STEM guys tend to be argumentative and have a hard time seeing others' points of view, especially if they deem that you're not acting in a "rational" manner. Appeals to emotion don't work with them, even though life sometimes calls for that. All they understand is rationality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband is an engineer but he is TERRIBLE at loading the dishwasher. TERRIBLE!
Ah yes, the dishwasher conundrum. We had to have a discussion about the best placement of different dishes for optimal water coverage. I will say that the downside of having a STEM husband is that I have to have the best logic to win an argument and I can't win an argument with emotional reasons. The upside is that he recognizes when my logic is better than his.
LOL!!! I love this explanation. It's hilarious and so true. I do the same thing. I have to frame my arguments more logically than I would around other people. He also wants to "fix" whatever I complain about when most of the time I just want someone to listen.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband is an engineer but he is TERRIBLE at loading the dishwasher. TERRIBLE!
Ah yes, the dishwasher conundrum. We had to have a discussion about the best placement of different dishes for optimal water coverage. I will say that the downside of having a STEM husband is that I have to have the best logic to win an argument and I can't win an argument with emotional reasons. The upside is that he recognizes when my logic is better than his.