Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do t get this dispute here at all. What’s so terrible about giving your spouse a hug when they’re sad? Isn’t that a normal human thing to comfort each other? Who are all these cold and unempathetic people here?
They likely have avoidant attachment styles. It’s really common among avoidants - emotion and closeness make them deeply uncomfortable.
The answer is for them to just marry other avoidants but the problem is with two avoidant people, after one argument both wander their separate ways and no one tries to keep the relationship together.
Oh lord with this psychobabble.
Reminds me of my husband who still complains about having to take care of his mother and her anxiety (which she tried to hide but ended up expressing it indirectly). He can't seem to let go of it and it affects how he relates to other women (including me) and what he perceives as their anxiety. He needs boundaries but it ain't gonna happen. Sigh....Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My most sympathetic take on this is he feels anxious because it's something he can't fix and he defaults to anger because that's the only emotion most adult men have ever had validated. He needs some kind of therapy to figure out why he's incapable of being a decent person when faced with your sadness.
This, exactly. Men are wired to want to fix every problem. They don’t know what to do with tears and sadness so they get angry with themselves and take it out on you. Vicious cycle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I do t get this dispute here at all. What’s so terrible about giving your spouse a hug when they’re sad? Isn’t that a normal human thing to comfort each other? Who are all these cold and unempathetic people here?
They likely have avoidant attachment styles. It’s really common among avoidants - emotion and closeness make them deeply uncomfortable.
The answer is for them to just marry other avoidants but the problem is with two avoidant people, after one argument both wander their separate ways and no one tries to keep the relationship together.
Anonymous wrote:I do t get this dispute here at all. What’s so terrible about giving your spouse a hug when they’re sad? Isn’t that a normal human thing to comfort each other? Who are all these cold and unempathetic people here?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you sound emotionally manipulative. The most simply answer as to why your husband will not hug you when you are crying of issues like "back to school stress" is that he simply refuses to reward your bad behavior.
The argument that that "men's only emotion is anger so he should go to therapy" is misandrist.
Lets take your example of "back to school stress" where you start the morning by crying. What is it that you want from him? Are you actually wanting a hug or are you wanting him to take care of some action items.
If what you want is literally a hug, CRYING FOR A HUG IS CHILDISH AND MANIPULATIVE. As an adult you should have self-awareness to think "humm... I"m stressed, I'd like a hug from my husband" than an ADULT will walk over to their husband and using their big girl words say: "honey, I'm feeling a lot of stress and a hug would make be feel less stressed. Will you please give me a hug?"
If you did that then I bet he would give you a hug. If he didn't give you hug, then he is being a jerk.
That isn't what you do. You cry (like a child) and hope his response is the magic response you want and if he doesn't give you the secret code you get to be more upset with him. YOU are manipulative.
What the actual hell. This is old and I still felt the need to comment. OP also literally had said that he still had anger when she was dealing with MOURNING. If he still shows anger in ALL crying situations, I don't think it's that she's being manipulative. She also said she rarely rarely expresses emotions to him now.
That's going to add up and there will be times "small things" cause crying. I didn't see where she expressed she didn't specifically ask for a hug. Maybe she didn't specifically ask. That could be clearer. But that is still in NO way manipulation. She's simply wanting human affection.
Crying is *gasp* a result of a lot of built up emotions over time. When we cry around those that love us, we're not crying to get attention and pity from them, but a typical response to seeing a loved one in distress is to comfort them.
Anonymous wrote:My DH is generally not affectionate….. but when i am upset or sad or crying, he refuses to give me a hug. My sadness seems to trigger anger in him. As a result, over the years, I have shared leas with him…..but this morning again i was crying (happens maybe twice a year, i don’t emote much anymore around him), where i just wanted a hug because i felt overwhelmed with childcare issue/ mundane back to school stress, he withdrew and refused a hug, and got angry at me for loading our dishwasher the wrong way….
I guess my question is, has anyone else found themself in this situation? I know he has empathy for other people, just not for me……isnt a husnand supposed to be a source of emtoonal support? I am pretty social and have lots of friends for support, but sometimes I want to feel like my DH wlso has my back….. but if i show any signs of being needy, he gets angry…..