Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Go to the Montgomery county circuit court in Rockville. Talk to the domestic violence attorney there, they have an office. It's free. I was the attorney there some years ago. No one will laugh at you. While there go to the Family help center. There are lawyers there too. Also free. Get information about divorce and referrals to attorneys. Best of luck.
Quoting this in the hopes OP sees it
Anonymous wrote:Go to the Montgomery county circuit court in Rockville. Talk to the domestic violence attorney there, they have an office. It's free. I was the attorney there some years ago. No one will laugh at you. While there go to the Family help center. There are lawyers there too. Also free. Get information about divorce and referrals to attorneys. Best of luck.
Agreed. And if you don't want her to control your behavior, don't change your behavior. Whether she is faking it or not is irrelevant.Anonymous wrote:Because I've had my wife overreact to my driving when, while it was certainly an expression of anger that she would have rathered I not feel or express, was not remotely dangerous. I have no way of knowing whether she honestly felt scared or, instead, was pretending to be scared because she wanted to express disapproval and control my behavior but knew that saying "I don't want you to feel or express anger" would not have been well taken.
Or maybe she honestly felt scared. You have huge issues, dude.
Because I've had my wife overreact to my driving when, while it was certainly an expression of anger that she would have rathered I not feel or express, was not remotely dangerous. I have no way of knowing whether she honestly felt scared or, instead, was pretending to be scared because she wanted to express disapproval and control my behavior but knew that saying "I don't want you to feel or express anger" would not have been well taken.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.
Speeding up and weaving through traffic is absolutely dangerous at any speed. You're an idiot, and I'm really worried about meeting some of you on the road (driving aggressively=driving dangerously FULL STOP).
Signed,
A survivor of two fatal car accidents
Hmmm...
yes..... that's what I thought.
Fatal car accidents can have survivors. It just means someone died. Not necessarily everyone.
That's not what we're thinking...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.
Speeding up and weaving through traffic is absolutely dangerous at any speed. You're an idiot, and I'm really worried about meeting some of you on the road (driving aggressively=driving dangerously FULL STOP).
Signed,
A survivor of two fatal car accidents
Hmmm...
yes..... that's what I thought.
Fatal car accidents can have survivors. It just means someone died. Not necessarily everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.
Speeding up and weaving through traffic is absolutely dangerous at any speed. You're an idiot, and I'm really worried about meeting some of you on the road (driving aggressively=driving dangerously FULL STOP).
Signed,
A survivor of two fatal car accidents
Hmmm...
yes..... that's what I thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.
Speeding up and weaving through traffic is absolutely dangerous at any speed. You're an idiot, and I'm really worried about meeting some of you on the road (driving aggressively=driving dangerously FULL STOP).
Signed,
A survivor of two fatal car accidents
Hmmm...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.
Speeding up and weaving through traffic is absolutely dangerous at any speed. You're an idiot, and I'm really worried about meeting some of you on the road (driving aggressively=driving dangerously FULL STOP).
Signed,
A survivor of two fatal car accidents
Anonymous wrote:Try your best not to upset your husband. Tend to his needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Uh, regardless of what his rage stemmed from, he put his wife and child (and lots of strangers) in mortal danger. Doesn't matter if he comes home from work pissed off and slaps her around, right? He's just mad at his boss... OF COURSE SHE NEEDS TO LEAVE. At the very least a separation while he gets into therapy and finds a way to control his temper.
How fast was everyone going? How close did his car come to others? How much more danger were they actually in? Was her perception of danger an accurate one?
You don't know. Neither do I. So your assertion of MORTAL DANGER would be like me saying there was never any danger at all.