Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Oh right, because I'm sure we are getting all of the facts and straight talk from a story this biased.
The fact that this story is so biased probably means the OP is toxic.
Any thread on DCUM describes only one person's point of view.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you move into the apartment and then you each get one weekend day with your daughter?
OP here. Thanks, that's a great idea.
The reality is that whenever he wants to "spend time with her", he ends up watching Youtube videos in his bedroom, and letting our daughter do screen time in her bedroom. Or they drive to grocery store. It is up to me if I want her to do anything else than these two activities.
I think I should give her some ideas about what to request to do when he wants to spend time with him.
Anonymous wrote:dialectical behavioral therapy. www.insteppc.com
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t protect her. He will treat her better if you stay out of it because he will have to and not blame you. People with HFA often blame others to not take accountability themselves. They have rejection sensitivity because of high anxiety. You being part of the equation gives him an excuse to behave badly. When you are out of it, he will have more reason to behave well. If you want what is best for your daughter I think you let them bond in their own way. It won’t be a neurotypical way but it will hopefully be a loving relationship in the way he can achieve that. He probably only wants one weekend day a week or month anyway. Don’t sweat it.
What a load of crap. You are not only diagnosing this ass&ole as HFA with no evidence whatsoever that he is. Maybe he is just an ass(ole. That's a possibility. Also, there is no such thing as "HFA often blame others." Stop generalizing!!!
You’re are right that some HFA are kind and manage their symptoms and some are maladaptive a-holes who destroy relationships.
Either way, Op has the second kind as a spouse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t protect her. He will treat her better if you stay out of it because he will have to and not blame you. People with HFA often blame others to not take accountability themselves. They have rejection sensitivity because of high anxiety. You being part of the equation gives him an excuse to behave badly. When you are out of it, he will have more reason to behave well. If you want what is best for your daughter I think you let them bond in their own way. It won’t be a neurotypical way but it will hopefully be a loving relationship in the way he can achieve that. He probably only wants one weekend day a week or month anyway. Don’t sweat it.
What a load of crap. You are not only diagnosing this ass&ole as HFA with no evidence whatsoever that he is. Maybe he is just an ass(ole. That's a possibility. Also, there is no such thing as "HFA often blame others." Stop generalizing!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Thanks for all your replies. I will speak to a divorce attorney.
Another angle to the story is that I gained 45 pounds in the past five years, and cannot be considered attractive anymore. He is very much into physical beauty.
However, even if I lose the weight and he becomes kinder to me, I would still find him repulsive.
He cheated on me even 6 years ago when I was a lovely and slender woman.
Good. Protect your interests and do it quietly. Don't tell anyone, not even a friend. Leaks happen. Right now -- in this -- you are your own best friend, and you are going to put her first for now. You don't have to make any other decisions yet, just quietly get good advice from a professional beholden only to you, and then figure out what the next step should be.
One way or another, this situation will change. Don't be blindsided by someone else springing that on you while you have to scramble to keep up. Good luck.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I think that dividing the house into two separate units would cut down on a lot if interaction (for example related to the kitchen, as one PP has pointed out). This can easily be accomplished just by putting up a drywall at a staircase. This would allow us to keep the house.
Of course, we would have to come up with a suitable financial arrangement.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Another issue that I have is that him valuing only monetary contribution to a marriage instills the wrong values in our daughter. He completely ignores the fact that I take care of absolutely everything concerning childcare, household, finances, etc. For example I pick up our daughter at 3 pm every day.
I really don't think that I should stay at the office until 7 pm to the detriment of our child, if we don't need it financially, just to prove a point. He is very mad about this attitude and ignores my work as a mother. Of course, he is not even present during the week.
My daughter is too young, but at some point I will explain to her that there is a lot of value in all the other work that a parent does.
The irony is that H had a stay-at-home mom and a live-in grandma. I, on the other hand, do everything that his mom and grandma did, on top of that what his father would do around the house and with the finances/paperwork, plus I work as a lawyer in my own firm (I have three employees).
We are surrounded by families with stay-at-home moms who are treated with respect and love by their husbands.
I personally do not know any other woman who earns $200k, except for big law partners. And it is still not enough. Sometimes I don't even know what to tell him, I just feel like crying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Could you move into the apartment and then you each get one weekend day with your daughter?
OP here. Thanks, that's a great idea.
The reality is that whenever he wants to "spend time with her", he ends up watching Youtube videos in his bedroom, and letting our daughter do screen time in her bedroom. Or they drive to grocery store. It is up to me if I want her to do anything else than these two activities.
I think I should give her some ideas about what to request to do when he wants to spend time with him.
Anonymous wrote:Oh right, because I'm sure we are getting all of the facts and straight talk from a story this biased.
The fact that this story is so biased probably means the OP is toxic.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you have made earning money the focus of your marriage. You are reaping what you are sowing. Stop focusing so much on who earns what. Tell your husband let's stop focusing on income as long as the bills are getting paid it doesn't matter who earns what. Stop focusing on money. Stop focusing on your pride. Focus on enjoying your home, your child. As long as you make salary the foundation of your marriage, it will slowly destroy your marriage.
You two are supposed to be a team.
No one cares about your money except you, OP.