Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:An adult who yells at anyone is unacceptable. Yes, we all makes mistakes, so maybe it happens once a decade. But, an adult who yells daily has a serious problem. Draw a boundary. Learn to say, “I understand you’re upset, but it’s unacceptable to yell at me. I am going to walk away and do something else. We can discuss this later when you’re able to do so calmly.”
My spouse raises his voice and yells, often in the car when I'm driving and in front of the young kids.
We try to catch up on things, he doesn't read his emails or texts - then can't find then, then gets angry and bullies me and yells. And of course blames me. for his yelling. "You make me do this."
I've calmly repeated myself: Stop yelling in the car. Stop raising your voice. Take a break, we will resolve the issue when you're calm.
He's scary.
Once I said Stop yelling like a freak, and he yelled about how I was name calling and an awful person. It's like he wants us to get in an accident on the freeway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How on earth did someone so CLEARLY type A/perfectionist/high strung end up with someone with severe ADHD, PTSD, depression & anxiety???
This sounds like a match made in absolute HELL.
Being type A is all about an incredibly intense need to control -- and you, being someone with special needs & mental health challenges, will ALWAYS be someone that he can never fully control, because you yourself don't have complete control and that's always going to be a huge problem for him (and it will only get worse over time).
This tells me that he's always treated you this way, right from the giset date on. His is such an intense need for control, that he could have never hid it, so you've known this about him since day 1.
Get out now -- you two should have never, ever gotten married in the first place.
I agree. OP surely noticed these red flags from the beginning. But like most women she ignored them. She passed on the good guys to go after the jerk who will mistreat her. Now she’s miserable. Lesson learned. Run away before he destroys your life.
Anonymous wrote:
How on earth did someone so CLEARLY type A/perfectionist/high strung end up with someone with severe ADHD, PTSD, depression & anxiety???
This sounds like a match made in absolute HELL.
Being type A is all about an incredibly intense need to control -- and you, being someone with special needs & mental health challenges, will ALWAYS be someone that he can never fully control, because you yourself don't have complete control and that's always going to be a huge problem for him (and it will only get worse over time).
This tells me that he's always treated you this way, right from the giset date on. His is such an intense need for control, that he could have never hid it, so you've known this about him since day 1.
Get out now -- you two should have never, ever gotten married in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Oh I’m so sorry. I was you five ears ago. I too have ADD. I ended up leaving. Divorce was the lesser of the evils because now I don’t have to worry that I didn’t ask permission to run the dishwasher or forgot to put toilet seat down or any number of egregious things I would do that set him off.
I’m so sorry. Living like that does a number on one’s self esteem.
Call the DV hotline. They have been super helpful to me
Anonymous wrote:An adult who yells at anyone is unacceptable. Yes, we all makes mistakes, so maybe it happens once a decade. But, an adult who yells daily has a serious problem. Draw a boundary. Learn to say, “I understand you’re upset, but it’s unacceptable to yell at me. I am going to walk away and do something else. We can discuss this later when you’re able to do so calmly.”
Anonymous wrote:Thank you for the responses. I see what everyone is saying but like, I am not in a position to leave the marriage right now. I have one older kid and a nursing baby and between working full time and breastfeeding and having shared finances and doing WFH with my husband I have no time for anything. I was just diagnosed with high cholesterol and prediabetes and cannot even find 20 minutes each day to work out. What is the point of documenting things? Why is no one suggesting pursuing marriage counseling, even if just for myself? We share one vehicle and I have very little privacy from him.
Anonymous wrote:Why didn’t you change the diaper if you were done and he was still eating? Then you cleared his plate. You are not so innocent.