Anonymous wrote:DH often makes critical comments- for example, he'll keep asking me for days why I forgot a simple task like washing a cup out, or if we have guests over, once they leave he'll immediately point out the things I did wrong. He never says things in a harsh tone, and it's not overtly critical, but it wears me down.
I've asked him to stop and he won't. We've tried counseling and it helped some, but it's still an almost daily occurance. I'm certain he's not going to change and I won't separate/divorce because we have kids. And it's not that I'm totally absent minded and forget to do everything; he just expects absolute perfection, which I can't do. So I need to figure out how to deal with my reaction or else I'm going to go bonkers.
Any advice on how to handle this? I know it's pretty benign, but being asked daily about something I did a week ago is draining.
Anonymous wrote:He's just a guy that needs to understand a process before he can move on. He's not being an ass on purpose, he really does want to know what happened so he can move on. It's just the way his brain works, don't take it personal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Before you decide to stay together "for the kids," remember that he will eventually begin to treat them this way as well.
Growing up that way turns that constant criticism into your mental sound track and your kids will internalize and criticize themselves even in his absence.
+1
And they will believe this is an appropriate way to interact with everyone in their lives, from their spouses to their coworkers to their teachers. Imagine how their relationships will play out.
There is nothing that can be done about this by divorce. If she divorces him, he is still there father, and presumably he'll have half custody and do this to them on his own time. So, that parts simply a done deal.
Right now they live with him 100% of the time. While I think there are a lot of steps between realizing there is a serious and fundamental problem with your partner and divorce, if DH ultimately refuses to change this behavior then it would be better for the kids to live 50% of the time with a parent who offers unconditional love and genuine appreciation for who they are than 100% of the time with a dad who criticizes everything they do and a mom who makes excuses.
But then they are ALONE with the critical parent 50% of the time. Could not disagree with you more.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not answer stupid questions and walk out of the room when he asks again. Tell him once that you are NOT going to entertain his nonsense and that is it. It is very hard to argue or harass someone who won't play back.
Finally, a reasonable answer. OP, all these posters telling you to "talk to your husband sternly and tell him he cannot do that" are just..misguided. You can't tell someone what to do, and you certainly cannot make "telling someone what to do and expecting them to do it" key for resolving conflicts. That's giving your power away to someone else.
The only person you can control is you. You are the answer. Not him. He is criticizing you because he sees that you are trying to achieve a criticism-free environment. The question to ask is: why do you care? Why do you care that he's unhappy with your non-cup-washing ways? Why do you care that he doesn't criticize you? So, stop caring. And make him see that. Make him understand no one cares that he expects the cups to be washed. Example:
Why didn't you wash that cup?
Didn't feel like it. (Direct look in his eyes)
(Repeating) Why didn't you wash that cup?
Just to piss you off. (Direct look in his eyes)
Do that enough and it will dawn on him that criticizing you feels bad and you aren't responding to it in any way. Like a dog. What you do is make it unpleasant FOR HIM to criticize you. Pretty soon he will make the connection "um, she doesn't care that I am dissatisfied with her ways of doing things, and she isn't going to change things to satisfy me. She is not up running to do things just to make me NOT criticize her. Plus, when I tell her what to do, she makes me feel stupid. Uh-oh. I don't want to be made feel stupid. "
why would you respond in a hostile, antagonistic way to someone like OP's husband, unless you think he's playing games with her? Why wouldn't you try to understand the root of the problem? My guess would be that you're not very interested in sex nor do you love a person to whom you would repeatedly respond, "just to piss you off."
Anonymous wrote:Before you decide to stay together "for the kids," remember that he will eventually begin to treat them this way as well.
Growing up that way turns that constant criticism into your mental sound track and your kids will internalize and criticize themselves even in his absence.