LovebirdsFlying
My husband drew this cartoon of me.
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It's kind of like, same song, next verse. This goes on so often. We keep having forms of the same conversation, over and over. Usually I'll ask a question, and Hubby tries to address what he thinks I "really meant" by that, rather than answering the question I actually asked. I don't know. Maybe somebody from his past expected him to read her mind, and when she said X, she really meant Y, but I don't play that game. I don't drop hints. What I say, I want him to take at face value. Then when I try to clarify, he'll get annoyed and say he already answered me. While it didn't end in annoyance this morning, my question never did get answered either.
The setup is, I have physical disabilities and cannot do as much housework as I'd like to do. Yesterday and today, back pain has been very high, and it's hard for me to do much of anything. What I didn't know before, but do now, is that Hubby also has back pain. In his adolescence he was treated for scoliosis--that I knew--but I didn't know he still has problems sometimes, because he hides it. On occasion he can't control the slight groan, and it takes him a second or two to be able to straighten up from bending over. I noticed that and asked him about it, and he admitted to me he has pain but doesn't talk about it as much as I talk about mine. Frankly, I think that's a little bit foolish. I talk about it not to kvetch but to give information and solve the problem; if something can't be done one way because the pain is too great, maybe there's another way it can be done. If I don't know he's having a problem, how can I help him solve it? (It's established already that he can be a bit of a martyr sometimes.)
So this morning, the dishwasher needed emptying. With the pain so bad, I knew I'd have trouble bending over to get the bottom rack. Sometimes he does too, but other times he's OK with it. I asked, if I empty the top rack, can he get the bottom? Or will it hurt him to bend over also?
His response: "Well, it has to be done."
"Right. But I'm just wanting to know if it will hurt you to do it."
"Like I said, it has to be done."
I suppose he thinks what I'm really asking is, would he please empty the bottom rack of the dishwasher? But I didn't ask, WOULD he? I asked, CAN he? And I specifically asked if it would cause pain, and he never answered that part. Does that mean it would, and he doesn't want me to know? This is exactly why I don't deal in subtleties and unspoken statements myself. I don't understand them.
Any feedback?
The setup is, I have physical disabilities and cannot do as much housework as I'd like to do. Yesterday and today, back pain has been very high, and it's hard for me to do much of anything. What I didn't know before, but do now, is that Hubby also has back pain. In his adolescence he was treated for scoliosis--that I knew--but I didn't know he still has problems sometimes, because he hides it. On occasion he can't control the slight groan, and it takes him a second or two to be able to straighten up from bending over. I noticed that and asked him about it, and he admitted to me he has pain but doesn't talk about it as much as I talk about mine. Frankly, I think that's a little bit foolish. I talk about it not to kvetch but to give information and solve the problem; if something can't be done one way because the pain is too great, maybe there's another way it can be done. If I don't know he's having a problem, how can I help him solve it? (It's established already that he can be a bit of a martyr sometimes.)
So this morning, the dishwasher needed emptying. With the pain so bad, I knew I'd have trouble bending over to get the bottom rack. Sometimes he does too, but other times he's OK with it. I asked, if I empty the top rack, can he get the bottom? Or will it hurt him to bend over also?
His response: "Well, it has to be done."
"Right. But I'm just wanting to know if it will hurt you to do it."
"Like I said, it has to be done."
I suppose he thinks what I'm really asking is, would he please empty the bottom rack of the dishwasher? But I didn't ask, WOULD he? I asked, CAN he? And I specifically asked if it would cause pain, and he never answered that part. Does that mean it would, and he doesn't want me to know? This is exactly why I don't deal in subtleties and unspoken statements myself. I don't understand them.
Any feedback?
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