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I don't know if you have said this before but I think you're hard on yourself right.
Yeah, I know. I think it's partially because I grew up in an area that has very high standards, and also because I very genuinely want to be the best person that I can be, and live my life to the fullest. I'm already thinking about how I can turn my story into a website or a book in the future to help people. I can't even function, yet somehow I'm thinking about helping people years from now. It sounds noble on the surface, but realistically, I think I have a problem.
Do you think these high standards are contributing to the problem. I see no problem holding them for yourself if they are realistic. However I believe it's stressful to apply those to others that can't meet them. As for the husband, might be good to stop letting him bother you the way he does. I understand that he can be devious about things and what he wants and says to you. But in all to keep your stress levels down, his problems really aren't your problem until they affect you in someway.
Another thing is when he comes to you to talk or express himself. Don't blow up... just listen and think about what you have to say to him. I'm not saying be nice to him but be blunt if you need to be. I say this because if you blow up in front of him, he won't come to you to express himself.
Yes and no. I think that my standards for my self have been a little too high in the past, and that I think I need to learn to give myself permission to relax a little. I thought for a little while that I was applying my high standards to my husband, but in retrospect I realize that it was just an excuse that he was using to avoid responsibility. For example, my husband seems to have stopped mowing the lawn regularly for no reason. I expect him to mow the lawn, which I think is pretty normal, but he'll try to tell me that he has some kind of 'special circumstance' (ie blame me). What was happening was that I was using my high standards for myself to convince myself that I could handle his responsibilities on top of my own, and therefore my load became way too heavy to carry...so I burned out. So in that sense, yes, it was part of the problem.
And, yeah, I agree that his problems aren't my problem until the affect me in some way, but that's the thing - they are affecting me in a lot of ways. Ways that I can't even put my finger on. Having to take on his responsibilities are an obvious one, but the more I understand what is going on here, the more I see that he is controlling everything I do. For example, he decided that I have to use his old junky broken vacuum from college to clean the house with. The motor is broken on it and it stops working half way through vacuuming constantly, but in his mind, this is the best option - so he somehow made me to believe that it's what's best for me. And here I am walking around depressed and with low self esteem, trying to figure out what "my problem" is, and it doesn't even dawn on me that I'm being stripped of my right to make basic decisions for myself such as buying a new vacuum when I clearly need one. So as long as this mind control is going on, his problems ARE my problems because he's making them my problems.
I subscribed to this line of thinking for awhile, and he started using it to control my expression of emotion. He started telling me that if I got too upset, he wouldn't share his "feelings" with me (ie, he would withhold emotional intimacy). So, I started trying to react to him in the way that I anticipated he would "approve" of because I did not want him to punish me by withholding intimacy. Eventually it turned into my having to help justify his bad behavior for him, and comfort HIM when he hurt ME.
Before I say anything about this, who handles the money?
I'm not sure if I mentioned this already or not, but my husband did start seeing a councilor at his job about this. The guy just called me and told me that he thinks that my husband has no personality and that he is trying to absorb mine. He said that he's going to try to work on helping my husband to develop a personality of his own. Then once he has a personality, I have to decide if I like it or not. I can see that my husband doesn't have a personality, but I'm not so sure that helping him to "develop a personality" is the full answer here.
Not that I'm making the link that DesMom's H is just like Scott Peterson....but, this was written about him, as a child:Oh my gosh...well at least you know for sure now you arent the crazy one..but ...how can somene have "no personality"?I've never heard of such a thing..is there a name to that other than "no personality"?
Dallas
His humanity didn't matter. He needed to suffocate himself and drown himself, essentially to death, spiritually, to be in this family."There's a psychological threat to him even being a person. So he becomes a person imitating a person. He needs to be perfect in the family. So perfect that he strangles the reality of himself.~
Scott Peterson: Destined To Kill? - CBS News
Not that I'm making the link that DesMom's H is just like Scott Peterson....but, this was written about him, as a child:
But isnt that a sociopath?
Dallas
Oh my gosh...well at least you know for sure now you arent the crazy one..but ...how can somene have "no personality"?I've never heard of such a thing..is there a name to that other than "no personality"?
Dallas
In reality your husband has a set of beliefs. He may not know that though. The counselor would be more helpful if he helped your husband to uncover the beliefs that are driving his behavior. Then, he could work on seeing things clearly, which would also change his beliefs, if that makes sense.
Not that I'm making the link that DesMom's H is just like Scott Peterson....but, this was written about him, as a child:
Yes....that *isn't* much help for you.I don't think that is the direction that his councilor is approaching this from. I explained to him that I was concerned that he was going to enable my husband to cling to more excuses for his behavior, and he insisted that he would not, but I don't think he understood what I was saying. I think that his councilor thinks that if he fixes my husbands social problems, he'll magically turn into a good husband. Basically, his response to the behavior problems I'm reporting are "if it's really that bad, you can't live there" - like that helps me at all.
Even my husband agrees that he doesn't understand how relationships are supposed to work, or how to treat people. He's even admit to thinking that his way is always the best way and that he's not interested in other peoples opinions on anything (he knows that this is a problem). So it's not like he wouldn't be open to what your saying about changing his beliefs, or at least taking a look at them.
That's what happens. While witnessing the standard of "we don't take notice of that" children learn that any "negative" thoughts or emotions they might have, just won't be tolerated----so, they have to squash them.That's really interesting. My husband grew up in a house where the family was expected to completely ignore any problems and pretend that they weren't happening. When I first met them, I was so confused because his mother was sitting at the dinner table very drunk, slurring her speech and falling off of her chair, and they were all pretending everything was normal. They were talking to her as if she was actually responding to them, and laughing and having a completely "normal" dinner. No one said a word about it, and my husband didn't mention it later on in private. As we were dating, I went on to witness this phenomenon countless times with her drinking and to this day not one of them have ever mentioned it out loud or acted as if something was wrong.
As a result, my husband walks around with a smile glued to his face 24 hours a day. Problems don't exist in his mind, and when I force them to exist, he forces them right back out of existence. His ability to trust his perceptions is non existent. He asks me for directions when driving on a road he's driven on a million times.
I don't know why his family didn't strike me as having deeper issues when I first met them. It's kind of hard to see past their smiles and laughter to all of the dysfunction that lurks beneath. Part of my initial attraction to my husband WAS that I thought he wasn't "all full of drama" like my past boyfriends. I even said to him "it's so nice to finally date a normal guy". I had no idea what I was talking about.
Even though we hated it ..and we were truamitized..as childre since NO ONE SAID IT WAS WRONG..we thought it was 'normal"..must be how everyoen is..I mean we never thought to think otherwise..Because no adults told us it was horrific and wrong and that they had serious issues..
This whole 'pretend lie everythign is fine' is so damaging I cant express how deeply it is...Incuding ironically even here ..the encouragement ot minimize yoru husbadns behavior..try and turn it in on you that maybe you re "just stressed"(NOT by yoru husband though .by your homrones or moving or anything but its your husband as the HUGE and primary source of stress) and givign him the benefit of the doubt on REPEATED behaviors that are extremely upsetting to you..that it isnt really what you THINK it is its something much 'nicer' than that..all in order to protect/shield the oen who is bat crazy doing the evil things that are hurting you..
Dallas
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