Anonymous wrote:My MIL is like this and it isn’t anxiety. She just has no common sense and too much time so she makes all situations way more complicated than they need to be. Also never thinks about how it impacts others. Mostly she wastes her own time and money so I don’t care, but then I have to hear about the whole story so it’s annoying.
Examples -
I send her a link for a cheap $5 toy on Amazon that my 4yr old would enjoy for his birthday. She has Prime. It was on prime - not an add-on. She takes the link, prints a copy of the picture and blows it up to see the brand name. Proceeds to call every store in her town asking if they have it after she went to 3 stores in person. In person at Micheals she talks to the manager to ask if they can stock it for her. It’s those capsules that melt in hot water and turn into little sponge animals.
Friend in UK’a mom dies. She wants to send flowers. She doesn’t find an online florist or call the funeral home in Scotland. She calls a local florist and of course the florist can’t process her check??? Or a foreign credit card?? So she asks the friend whose mom died to pay the florist and pays her back.
I work from home and there have been many times when I’ve been at their house on a long visit on a work day and working from their office. I hear her start her day with coffee at 9am.. Around 10 she starts making calls and deals with random customer service things until 1-2pm!! Sending emails, following up, leaving detailed Amazon and Etsy reviews “because they invited me to”, calling store managers about obscure questions / products she can buy online, etc. Then she breaks for lunch and runs an errand. When she gets home at 5-6pm she wonders what to have for dinner and inevitably needs to go to the store. She is the most inefficient person I have ever met - and so busy! She is always stressed about how busy she is with all the busy work she makes for herself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your husband "threw his back out" when you had cancer and you felt you couldn't ask for support because of this?
This isn't drama - this is being a straight up asshole.
The water damage is more of a common sense thing. This is the sort of thing my husband would do - ugh.
+ 1 million!
Signed,
- A cancer survivor
Anonymous wrote:Your husband "threw his back out" when you had cancer and you felt you couldn't ask for support because of this?
This isn't drama - this is being a straight up asshole.
The water damage is more of a common sense thing. This is the sort of thing my husband would do - ugh.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
I just want to cry for you and your husband.
OP, go to therapy . Even if DH will not go, therapist will give you an understanding of situation and ways of dealing with DH. He is a broken little boy. You need to find healthy ways of being it this will normalize dysfunction for your kids.
You are partnering with him to normalize dysfunction therefore he really has no true motivation or alternate perspective or reason to change.
Get thee to therapy.
Good Luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, do you work or have access to joint funds? What will happen if you just call the plumber and get the work done, cut a check and call it a day? This is what i would do.
Also you need to have a come to Jesus with DH. About how there were dysfunctional patterns in your families of origin and how you should both try consistently do better for your kids. For the types of things you described - i would say marriage therapy is definitely warranted. But both have to be willing.
Thank you for your support, seriously. Agree that marriage counseling would be optimal - but if DH agreed to that, he would have to also agree that his family of origin is less than picture perfect, which would never (yes, never) happen. But yes, I agree owning the issues and looking to correct them is step one. I try to do that with my family of origin - I think he was attracted to me because I was opposite of his meltdown prone, anxiety ridden mother. I do not know how much I can do myself, but I am willing and trying. I don't escalate, because I know that is what he wants, because that is (having spent a decent amount of time around his family, by now) what he is accustomed to. Anything for attention. For example, he has learned that people listen to him when he complains about money, so that is what he does, even though it is not really an issue. I would love to talk to a therapist that is familiar with familial disorders, and some of the issues I mention, and where to go from here. I think I should at least try implementing some tried and true methods before I throw in the towel.
Anonymous wrote:This water heater thing is insane. I think you are too patient. I would have called a plumber on day 2. Can you just steam roll over your DH and call in a handyman/professional? How would your DH react?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, do you work or have access to joint funds? What will happen if you just call the plumber and get the work done, cut a check and call it a day? This is what i would do.
Also you need to have a come to Jesus with DH. About how there were dysfunctional patterns in your families of origin and how you should both try consistently do better for your kids. For the types of things you described - i would say marriage therapy is definitely warranted. But both have to be willing.
Thank you for your support, seriously. Agree that marriage counseling would be optimal - but if DH agreed to that, he would have to also agree that his family of origin is less than picture perfect, which would never (yes, never) happen. But yes, I agree owning the issues and looking to correct them is step one. I try to do that with my family of origin - I think he was attracted to me because I was opposite of his meltdown prone, anxiety ridden mother. I do not know how much I can do myself, but I am willing and trying. I don't escalate, because I know that is what he wants, because that is (having spent a decent amount of time around his family, by now) what he is accustomed to. Anything for attention. For example, he has learned that people listen to him when he complains about money, so that is what he does, even though it is not really an issue. I would love to talk to a therapist that is familiar with familial disorders, and some of the issues I mention, and where to go from here. I think I should at least try implementing some tried and true methods before I throw in the towel.