LovebirdsFlying

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It's a petty little gripe. I'm more confused--perplexed, baffled, puzzled--than angry. But I can't get an answer from my husband (he may be freezing up because he thinks I'm angry) so I'm tossing out the subject here.

Finally, at long last, he bought himself some new socks. I'd been concerned about that for a while. His old, stretched out ones have holes you can drive a car through. He now has enough new socks to wear a pair a day for two weeks, even if we don't do laundry. But we do two or three loads a week--so in other words, he has plenty of new socks.

Last week, when doing laundry, I noticed the hamper was still full of his old, worn out socks, and none of his new ones. When I put the laundry away, I saw that he hadn't even opened the packaging. OK, he's been busy, so I did that for him, paired them off, and folded them neatly in the drawer. I thought I'd be overstepping my bounds if I actually threw the old ones away, so I put them in behind the new ones.

This week, on laundry day, I'm still noticing the old socks in the hamper more than the new ones.

Of course, nobody can answer specifically for my husband, but are there reasons some people don't like to wear new socks? They're tight? They're scratchy? What?

My concern is that he does need to look professional at work, but his reasoning is that nobody sees his socks anyway, so what difference does it make?

I'm also aware that there is a personality disorder that causes people to seek out the damaged, inferior merchandise and use it for themselves. I remember seeing a letter in an advice column years ago, about a woman who always made sure she got the bent utensils and cracked dishes when the family ate together. It wasn't about being polite and saving the better stuff for other people, because she actively went through and looked for the damaged items to use for herself. I don't know the name of it, but it is a personality disorder. I'm wondering if the same thing is going on with my husband. Does he think there is some virtue in denying himself new socks, and wearing old ones full of holes instead? It took him long enough to buy them for himself in the first place--and I know he'd be much quicker to buy them for me if I needed them.

PS: Would I in fact be overstepping my boundaries if I threw the old socks away?
 

mkgal1

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PS: Would I in fact be overstepping my boundaries if I threw the old socks away?
Yes.....and to be honest, it's my opinion that you're overstepping boundaries being concerned more than he is about his socks. That's his "cushion" to be concerned about (I'm referring to a comment made in this video---if you're interested in watching).
 
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Chesterton

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Of course, nobody can answer specifically for my husband, but are there reasons some people don't like to wear new socks? They're tight? They're scratchy? What?

The reason you don't like to wear new socks is because you already have old socks which perform their function as well or better than new socks. Then when the old socks become unable to perform their function, you have brand new socks to replace them.
My concern is that he does need to look professional at work, but his reasoning is that nobody sees his socks anyway, so what difference does it make?

His reasoning is sound.
I'm also aware that there is a personality disorder...

Yeah, no, don't go there. Not everyone who disagrees with you has a personality disorder. That's how we get bogus words like "homophobia" and "islamophobia". If you attribute differences of opinion to "disorders" then you're the one with a disorder.
I remember seeing a letter in an advice column years ago, about a woman who always made sure she got the bent utensils and cracked dishes when the family ate together. It wasn't about being polite and saving the better stuff for other people, because she actively went through and looked for the damaged items to use for herself. I don't know the name of it, but it is a personality disorder. I'm wondering if the same thing is going on with my husband. Does he think there is some virtue in denying himself new socks, and wearing old ones full of holes instead? It took him long enough to buy them for himself in the first place--and I know he'd be much quicker to buy them for me if I needed them.

I always use the bent and cracked stuff first. This is not a disorder, it's common sense. And you can argue it's a virtue.
PS: Would I in fact be overstepping my boundaries if I threw the old socks away?

If they belong to you, you can do what you want. If his socks are his, then leave them alone.
 
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snoochface

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I think you're way over-analyzing here. It doesn't matter - maybe he is just more comfortable in the old socks. He'll get to the new ones eventually. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
 
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LovebirdsFlying

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Honestly, this was supposed to be meant light-hearted. It's a small thing, I know. I'm just confused. The way I see it, the socks *are* worn beyond being serviceable, if they're full of holes, and are so stretched out they don't stay up. I don't understand still wanting to wear them when new socks are available, and I'm trying to see it though his eyes.

I'm from the "ring around the collar" generation. Anybody remember that ad campaign? Husband and wife are out doing something together. Someone notices and points out that the collar of the husband's shirt is dirty. Everyone glares at the wife, and she withers in shame. As another letter to an advice column put it, just once she'd like to see the wife glare back at the husband and say, "Well, why don't you wash your neck every once in a while?" Then there's the fabric softener commercial where the premise was that they are pranking a housewife, telling her they're taking the whitening ingredient out of their product. Wife throws a fit because if the family's clothes are gray and dingy, it reflects badly on her. So yeah, wife judged by husband's appearance. That's the society I got used to. Hard to deprogram that way of thinking sometimes.
 
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snoochface

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I'm 50, I still feel like I have to make sure my husband goes out looking presentable or it reflects on me as much as it does on him. But I stop being picky when it comes to things no one else can see. Then it's up to him how comfortable/uncomfortable he wants to be.
 
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Tamara224

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I tease my husband about not getting rid of his old, worn-out socks. I told him if I'm doing laundry and I see socks with holes in them, they're going in the trash.

It's just socks. Toss them. If he freaks out about something so small, you have bigger problems.

Also... did you wash the new socks? Maybe he doesn't like them straight from the package and just hasn't gotten around to washing them yet.
 
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LbF, my husband does this too. Wears socks with holes in them. Seems attached to them. I don't get it either.

I'd toss the hole-y socks. I figure it's the prerogative of the person doing the washing to remove items too damaged to wear any more...
 
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LovebirdsFlying

My husband drew this cartoon of me.
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By the way, some of them have been darned a few times already. :) He was resistant to buying new socks in the first place, but he would at least let me patch them up. Now the darning and patching is worn out too. That's how old they are.
 
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LovebirdsFlying

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I tease my husband about not getting rid of his old, worn-out socks. I told him if I'm doing laundry and I see socks with holes in them, they're going in the trash.

It's just socks. Toss them. If he freaks out about something so small, you have bigger problems.

Also... did you wash the new socks? Maybe he doesn't like them straight from the package and just hasn't gotten around to washing them yet.

Good idea there. I may toss the new ones into the next load, just to make sure they're nice and soft and fluffy for him.
 
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Tropical Wilds

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The mantra that has saved my life over the last year or so?

"I can be right or I can be sane."

Meaning I can be right, make sure everybody know how right I am, and if they don't, fight until they bask in my rightness... Or I can skip the drama and finish my day not being driven crazy by something that may not ultimately matter in the long run.

I'd say that applies here.

I don't think he has a personality disorder or a compulsion beyond what comes with having that Y chromosome. But if you feel this is truly a battle you want to pick, give him a heads up that you've noticed you both have some clothes and foundation pieces that are looking a bit ratty and as you notice them passing through the laundry, you're going to see if they can be salvaged, and if they can't you'll chuck them. Give it a laundry day or two and cull out a single pair of bad socks each load of laundry. In a few weeks, the good ones will hit the rotation and the problem will be solved.

If he says "please don't," then let it go with the understanding that choosing to not fight over gnarly socks is better than the alternative and have a glass of wine to toast the good fortune to having this be the prevailing issue in the marriage.
 
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LOL, I think most men are like this. My hubby wears socks until the holes are so big, the sock does not have a shape anymore. I do throw them out and put a new pair in their place, he is OK with that, in fact, told me a few years ago, I could cull out his old socks and replace them, that he did not care. I guess, they just get use to certain pairs and wear them. LOL.

Oh, by the way, I remember the "Ring around collar" commercials, they were funny.
 
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To be honest, if it were me, I'd generally just stay out of my husband's sock drawer.

However, if you want to be a bit more proactive, then I would suggest washing the new ones and putting them in the drawer. Then take the old ones out, but rather than throwing them away, put them aside somewhere. The reason is, that if he objects and wants his old socks back, you haven't thrown them away.

My husband from time to time will throw away something of mine. To be honest, I find that very disrespectful. Lord help me, I'm tempted at times to do the same and show him how it feels, but I'm not into childish games so I just tell him how I feel and let it go. But because it seems very disrespectful to me, I wouldn't care to do that to another person. Having them put away instead solves that problem, and they can be given back if it's a big deal to him for some reason.

But maybe he's just grabbing the old ones out of habit. I'd probably tend to do that myself in some instances.
 
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ValleyGal

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LOL!! This thread is hilarious.

I don't care about my husbands socks. Or underwear. Or clothes. He can do what he wants with them. Not my business.

My own socks? The second they even look like they're going to get a hole, they are in the garbage - and I have new socks on standby most times just in case.

Now dishcloths? That's another story. I use dishcloths until they are old and full of holes or they are so stinky-dirty that even washing them with bleach, they still come out as though I've used Stiffy on them. lol. I just can't be bothered to pick up new ones, especially because I have a certain type that I prefer more than others, and they are expensive. The only times I actually switch them out is if I get a new set of them for Christmas. Then I take the hint and use the old ones for rags to wash the tub. LOL.

Good luck with your husband's socks. hehehe
 
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LovebirdsFlying

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Yes.....and to be honest, it's my opinion that you're overstepping boundaries being concerned more than he is about his socks. That's his "cushion" to be concerned about (I'm referring to a comment made in this video---if you're interested in watching).
Watched.

I was raised by a codependent mother. I probably learned a lot of that way of thinking--and can unlearn it too, but it will take a while.
 
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Toss the socks. He is most likely a creature of habit and just grabs what is most familiar. But a good barrier between foot and sole makes the shoe last longer and stay cleaner, I imagine.

If you are truly concerned about a backlash, save the old socks. Don’t put them in the back of the drawer, but rather just keep them in the bottom of the hamper as if they quit making it to the wash. You could also “help them along,” so to speak, but accelerating the wear and tear such that they no longer even form a tube.
 
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