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The New Coffee Room

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Advice

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  • Aqua LetiferA Aqua Letifer

    Not a flex, just laying out my experience:

    My wife and I have been through some heavy, heavy fucking fights. We had to sort out some pretty fucked up shit from the get-go, and before she and I were adequately prepared to do so properly. It was rough, still is, but we're in a very good spot now and we know how exactly to fight with each other. We’re very good at it.

    Read Jolly's posts again, he's right.
    I believe Mik is correct in his analysis, but I'll try to expand more on the tactical:

    You don't have a problem here. You both do. And these fights are not unnecessary, they're essential. They indicate a misalignment that neither she nor you have fixed.

    Your framing of these fights are concerning to me. If you’re seeing things through the lens of “good” rationality vs “silly” emotions, that’s a rookie male move and it’s untrue.

    Rationality can have logical gaps. We can construct lines of thinking that are faulty. But emotions are always right. Always. Every single time, emotions tell the truth. Where they get a bad rep is that they’re so primal, and the world is so complicated, that we almost never interpret them correctly. They’re very important signposts we suck at interpreting. If you don’t respect that, you’re never going to fix problems like this because they aren’t fixed with logic alone.

    To fix fight problems, you both need to drop your stupid egos and be more trusting of the other person than you are defensive or scared. That’s step one.

    Oh and guess what: it's got to start with you. You have to make the first move, always. You need to work with her to map out the emotional landscape here: hers, and yours. That’s very difficult and requires a lot of failed attempts, consistency and patience, but I guarantee you it will be enlightening when it starts to happen. Only after you do that can you work with each other on understanding what everyone’s emotions mean, and the problems they’re really pointing to. When you do that, setting up a gameplan to fix things is easy as.

    The next time your wife gets that way, get her to tell you more. Literally say, “okay, and what else?” (God help you if you say it sarcastically or start to defend yourself. This isn’t about that.) If she gets defensive, she’s either scared about confiding thoughts she feels she shouldn’t have, or doesn’t trust you or both. Gotta get past that shit. Do everything you can to prove you’re there to help, and keep at it until she feels comfortable opening up. You need to convince her that doing so will be judgment-free, and that you’re there to listen. No you're not doing that to make her feel heard and to say "you understand," that's stupid meme shit. It’s to map the full landscape, find out what isn’t being said, and what everyone’s feelings really mean.

    Emotional intelligence is a skill. You get to a place where you can do this with each other on the regular, fights still happen but they’re no big deal and they’re a shitload easier to conclude.

    89th8 Offline
    89th8 Offline
    89th
    wrote on last edited by
    #24

    @Aqua-Letifer

    I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

    Irregardless... (ok just kidding, I know you hate that), I'll try hard to look at the emotions behind these fights. However I know her, it's tough for her to sit down and discuss our egos, our emotions, our trust... We trust each other, we know each other very well, and if I even want to talk about yesterday's fight, she'll just say she doesn't want to talk about it.

    The next time your wife gets that way, get her to tell you more. Literally say, “okay, and what else?” (God help you if you say it sarcastically or start to defend yourself. This isn’t about that.) If she gets defensive, she’s either scared about confiding thoughts she feels she shouldn’t have, or doesn’t trust you or both. Gotta get past that shit.

    We will see. A great example is we have about 10 thank-you cards to write. She's been wanting to write them for a few weeks. I have offered to just do them. Not in a mean way, but she's made it clear she wants to be there when we write them so that we do it together, she includes her gratitude, etc. Normally this would be fine, but I can guarantee at some point if the thank you cards come up as a topic, she'll make a comment about how I could've just taken charge and written them, even though I specifically am waiting since I know she wants to be involved. Another minor, but clear, example that we are struggling with communication.

    Aqua LetiferA JollyJ 2 Replies Last reply
    • MikM Mik

      Yep. Once you get to stressed out, there are a million things going through her mind - "I'm not good enough". "You're not good enough". "But I HAVE to be good enough!". "My mom was good enough" and any permutation of these themes you can think of. Things that would never occur to you to ponder. You have to help get her back to, "well, this is OK.".

      89th8 Offline
      89th8 Offline
      89th
      wrote on last edited by
      #25

      @Mik said in Advice:

      Yep. Once you get to stressed out, there are a million things going through her mind - "I'm not good enough". "You're not good enough". "But I HAVE to be good enough!". "My mom was good enough" and any permutation of these themes you can think of. Things that would never occur to you to ponder. You have to help get her back to, "well, this is OK.".

      Indeed, and perhaps I need to force myself to remember once she's at a certain stressed level, and particularly when it comes with blames/insults towards me, NOW is not the time to force the plane in for a landing. Just let the turbulence ride out without fighting it.

      Yet even now, I'm not sure how to interact when I see her later. My instinct is to remain upset (which I am) with how she handled things and what she said and for her to realize that. But I'd imagine in her head she's been thinking "I can't believe he said I was complaining about my own choice" or something along those lines.

      MikM 1 Reply Last reply
      • 89th8 89th

        @Aqua-Letifer

        I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

        Irregardless... (ok just kidding, I know you hate that), I'll try hard to look at the emotions behind these fights. However I know her, it's tough for her to sit down and discuss our egos, our emotions, our trust... We trust each other, we know each other very well, and if I even want to talk about yesterday's fight, she'll just say she doesn't want to talk about it.

        The next time your wife gets that way, get her to tell you more. Literally say, “okay, and what else?” (God help you if you say it sarcastically or start to defend yourself. This isn’t about that.) If she gets defensive, she’s either scared about confiding thoughts she feels she shouldn’t have, or doesn’t trust you or both. Gotta get past that shit.

        We will see. A great example is we have about 10 thank-you cards to write. She's been wanting to write them for a few weeks. I have offered to just do them. Not in a mean way, but she's made it clear she wants to be there when we write them so that we do it together, she includes her gratitude, etc. Normally this would be fine, but I can guarantee at some point if the thank you cards come up as a topic, she'll make a comment about how I could've just taken charge and written them, even though I specifically am waiting since I know she wants to be involved. Another minor, but clear, example that we are struggling with communication.

        Aqua LetiferA Offline
        Aqua LetiferA Offline
        Aqua Letifer
        wrote on last edited by Aqua Letifer
        #26

        @89th said in Advice:

        @Aqua-Letifer

        I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

        All that's totally fine. Just call it out. "Hey, looks like the carrier's stressing you out here. Is it the carrier or other stuff on your mind?"

        She might balk, get snarky at that, ignore you, who knows. All defense mechanisms. Gotta get past it. Maybe with something like, "Okay, but look, you're stressed and that's no good. But it can be fixed, we can do something about it. We just have to talk about it first. You want to talk about it now? Later, when we have more time?"

        Don't take the snide talk as an insult, or poor communication. Treat it as information. It's telling you something.

        Keep needling, nicely and openly. It might be weird at first because it's not natural and she'll know that. Might even get suspicious. Gotta keep trying, both when you're in that situation and when you have a free moment.

        I hope you can appreciate the fact that that disagreement was so not about the carrier.

        Please love yourself.

        89th8 1 Reply Last reply
        • Aqua LetiferA Aqua Letifer

          @89th said in Advice:

          @Aqua-Letifer

          I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

          All that's totally fine. Just call it out. "Hey, looks like the carrier's stressing you out here. Is it the carrier or other stuff on your mind?"

          She might balk, get snarky at that, ignore you, who knows. All defense mechanisms. Gotta get past it. Maybe with something like, "Okay, but look, you're stressed and that's no good. But it can be fixed, we can do something about it. We just have to talk about it first. You want to talk about it now? Later, when we have more time?"

          Don't take the snide talk as an insult, or poor communication. Treat it as information. It's telling you something.

          Keep needling, nicely and openly. It might be weird at first because it's not natural and she'll know that. Might even get suspicious. Gotta keep trying, both when you're in that situation and when you have a free moment.

          I hope you can appreciate the fact that that disagreement was so not about the carrier.

          89th8 Offline
          89th8 Offline
          89th
          wrote on last edited by
          #27

          @Aqua-Letifer said in Advice:

          Don't take the snide talk as an insult, or poor communication. Treat it as information. It's telling you something.

          Keep needling, nicely and openly. It might be weird at first because it's not natural and she'll know that. Might even get suspicious. Gotta keep trying, both when you're in that situation and when you have a free moment.

          Good stuff man. Thanks.

          1 Reply Last reply
          • 89th8 Offline
            89th8 Offline
            89th
            wrote on last edited by
            #28

            OH btw, I can be an idiot.

            Today I was switching out some old sand in a sandbox and put it in our yard waste container. Well sure... lots and lots of scoops of sand, I can do. When I went to move the yard waste container, it probably had about 800 pounds of sand in it and I nearly crushed my hands as it tipped over. My potential piano career would've been over just like that.

            Aqua LetiferA 1 Reply Last reply
            • 89th8 89th

              OH btw, I can be an idiot.

              Today I was switching out some old sand in a sandbox and put it in our yard waste container. Well sure... lots and lots of scoops of sand, I can do. When I went to move the yard waste container, it probably had about 800 pounds of sand in it and I nearly crushed my hands as it tipped over. My potential piano career would've been over just like that.

              Aqua LetiferA Offline
              Aqua LetiferA Offline
              Aqua Letifer
              wrote on last edited by Aqua Letifer
              #29

              @89th said in Advice:

              OH btw, I can be an idiot.

              Today I was switching out some old sand in a sandbox and put it in our yard waste container. Well sure... lots and lots of scoops of sand, I can do. When I went to move the yard waste container, it probably had about 800 pounds of sand in it and I nearly crushed my hands as it tipped over. My potential piano career would've been over just like that.

              LOL yesterday my wife and I both about lost our shit trying to get our kiddo to try her bike. I almost lost my fingers. (Our daughter grew out of the strider and has to jump up to training wheels, but she's not quite getting it and giving up.)

              My wife tried first, got really frustrated. I made it longer, and there were some short moments where she got it, but she'd stop fast every time. I was bending down, physically moving the pedals for her to give her a feel for it. (I remember that as a kid: up-and-down pedals is a terrible position to start on; both halfway up is far easier.) It was hurting my back something awful, though, and then she'd just stop. Also, she kept kicking my hands into the gears, which was not a good time.

              Turns out, though, the training wheels suck ass. When she leans over, the wheels shift and kinda dig in with a lot of friction. No wonder it wasn't working for her.

              Fucking POS craptastic Amazon Basically FUBAR fucking training wheels.

              Couple of washers they should have included but didn't should do it.

              Please love yourself.

              89th8 1 Reply Last reply
              • brendaB Offline
                brendaB Offline
                brenda
                wrote on last edited by brenda
                #30

                Great advice from you fellas. Y'all could write a book on this together, each having your say on the chapter topic. I'll give you some chapter headings to consider for the book y'all need to write.

                Chapter 1 - Generational Upbringing
                Hubby and I are both Minnesooootans, and from families that have other similarities, yet differences. Your bride may have some of the same Scandihoovian generational background, especially if her maiden name ends with 'son'. What you describe is familiar to what I have seen, and how my mind sometimes wants to go, but I have learned to recognize the trap and try to avoid it, though not always successfully.

                Chapter 2 - Unrealistic Expectations of Self
                You and your wife have three small kids, and life is so busy you hardly have time to think or relax. I suspect that is 90% of what has brought you to this point. Your wife may think she's not meeting her own expectations or her mother's, not that we will go to blaming the MIL (at least not yet, LOL). It's true that wives can have expectations for themselves that are just plain unrealistic. They will beat themselves up, creating even more damage, so much that it spills over to anger at anyone and anything around them. They're really angry at themselves. They can't see it's not necessary to beat themselves up over it.

                Chapter 3 - Feeling Demeaned
                If she had a career outside the home before the kids, she may also miss the perks of that, with a prominent one being the way our current society values it. There are many people today who treat a full-time mom as less valued than a woman with a career. People will say they think motherhood is important, even more important than a job outside the home, but their attitude and behavior toward a full-time mom says far more than their words. Full-time moms see this, they experience it, and it affects their sense of self-worth. Yes, we should ignore those other people, but holy cow, they're everywhere it seems. In social settings, it can be very demeaning to the full-time mom, and it takes a toll. It can create depression, anger at others, and added stress.

                Chapter 4 - Extended Postpartum Issues
                Post-partum depression can last longer that what most people would expect, even longer than a typical physician expects. The mom with three small kids may think, "Hey, I've had two kids already, I can handle one more. I'm experienced now. This will be so much easier than before." It's hard to know whether to laugh or cry when the reality of raising the third baby sets in, showing itself to be more challenging than expected. Sleep issues make it all worse.

                If you think this could be happening, encourage your wife to have a check up at the doctor, and offer to go with her if possible. Let her know you think her overall health is very important, and that you know she has extra stress right now with the kids being so dependent. Remind her she is the most important person in the world to you, and that you want her to feel her best by addressing health issues of any kind.

                Chapter 5 - How to Help

                • Let her know she's a great mom, especially with the challenge of having three very young ones right now.
                • Ask her what she needs most from you now, and if it's a list of more than two things, write it all down.
                • If some items on the list are tasks around the house, make a cheat sheet for yourself to check off the tasks every day. Post it where you will see it every day (and if she sees it as well, that will be in your favor.) Your reliability is soothing for her, and helps reduce the stress for both of you. It shows her you are committed to being her steady support. It will be a tangible way to show you are following through just as promised. It will also remind her of all you do, reducing her claims that she has to do everything. It may seem like a pain in the neck to have a checklist for yourself, but it also means she won't need to remind you, which is annoying as heck for a wife.
                • Tell her at least once per week you love her and she's the most important person in your world. Boost her self-esteem by letting her know she's still the one you would choose every time. (Put this on your checklist at the very top. 👍 )
                1 Reply Last reply
                • Aqua LetiferA Aqua Letifer

                  @89th said in Advice:

                  OH btw, I can be an idiot.

                  Today I was switching out some old sand in a sandbox and put it in our yard waste container. Well sure... lots and lots of scoops of sand, I can do. When I went to move the yard waste container, it probably had about 800 pounds of sand in it and I nearly crushed my hands as it tipped over. My potential piano career would've been over just like that.

                  LOL yesterday my wife and I both about lost our shit trying to get our kiddo to try her bike. I almost lost my fingers. (Our daughter grew out of the strider and has to jump up to training wheels, but she's not quite getting it and giving up.)

                  My wife tried first, got really frustrated. I made it longer, and there were some short moments where she got it, but she'd stop fast every time. I was bending down, physically moving the pedals for her to give her a feel for it. (I remember that as a kid: up-and-down pedals is a terrible position to start on; both halfway up is far easier.) It was hurting my back something awful, though, and then she'd just stop. Also, she kept kicking my hands into the gears, which was not a good time.

                  Turns out, though, the training wheels suck ass. When she leans over, the wheels shift and kinda dig in with a lot of friction. No wonder it wasn't working for her.

                  Fucking POS craptastic Amazon Basically FUBAR fucking training wheels.

                  Couple of washers they should have included but didn't should do it.

                  89th8 Offline
                  89th8 Offline
                  89th
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #31

                  @Aqua-Letifer Oh the strider bike. We bought a bike (with training wheels) for our kid last May... she started to do well, but then has since gone back to the strider (or balance bike). She cruises around on it so fast, hard to tell her to switch!

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • 89th8 89th

                    @Mik said in Advice:

                    Yep. Once you get to stressed out, there are a million things going through her mind - "I'm not good enough". "You're not good enough". "But I HAVE to be good enough!". "My mom was good enough" and any permutation of these themes you can think of. Things that would never occur to you to ponder. You have to help get her back to, "well, this is OK.".

                    Indeed, and perhaps I need to force myself to remember once she's at a certain stressed level, and particularly when it comes with blames/insults towards me, NOW is not the time to force the plane in for a landing. Just let the turbulence ride out without fighting it.

                    Yet even now, I'm not sure how to interact when I see her later. My instinct is to remain upset (which I am) with how she handled things and what she said and for her to realize that. But I'd imagine in her head she's been thinking "I can't believe he said I was complaining about my own choice" or something along those lines.

                    MikM Offline
                    MikM Offline
                    Mik
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #32

                    @89th said in Advice:

                    @Mik said in Advice:

                    Yep. Once you get to stressed out, there are a million things going through her mind - "I'm not good enough". "You're not good enough". "But I HAVE to be good enough!". "My mom was good enough" and any permutation of these themes you can think of. Things that would never occur to you to ponder. You have to help get her back to, "well, this is OK.".

                    Indeed, and perhaps I need to force myself to remember once she's at a certain stressed level, and particularly when it comes with blames/insults towards me, NOW is not the time to force the plane in for a landing. Just let the turbulence ride out without fighting it.

                    Yet even now, I'm not sure how to interact when I see her later. My instinct is to remain upset (which I am) with how she handled things and what she said and for her to realize that. But I'd imagine in her head she's been thinking "I can't believe he said I was complaining about my own choice" or something along those lines.

                    Good time to practice not forcing the plane in for a landing. I understand that to you the situation is SO FUCKING OBVIOUS, and it feels like a capitulation to just let it go. But it's not. To see it otherwise makes it a win-lose rather than a win-win.

                    My dad was a challenge to live with at the best of times. One thing his girlfriend shared with me was that when you have to tolerate something you abhor or do something you really don't want to do, think of it as a gift that you are giving her freely as her husband.

                    “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • 89th8 Offline
                      89th8 Offline
                      89th
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #33

                      Wow some good nuggets in there!

                      @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up! Second, yes chapters 2 and 3 (the stress of the kids combined with an emotion of either jealousy or resentment that I'm employed and she's not).

                      @Mik Tolerating as a gift, wow that's a good one to remember.

                      brendaB 1 Reply Last reply
                      • 89th8 89th

                        Wow some good nuggets in there!

                        @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up! Second, yes chapters 2 and 3 (the stress of the kids combined with an emotion of either jealousy or resentment that I'm employed and she's not).

                        @Mik Tolerating as a gift, wow that's a good one to remember.

                        brendaB Offline
                        brendaB Offline
                        brenda
                        wrote on last edited by brenda
                        #34

                        @89th said in Advice:

                        Wow some good nuggets in there!

                        @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up!

                        Excellent! We finally got ours here a couple days ago, but the metro area has had them for about three weeks already. You are so spoiled having them come to your area so early!

                        89th8 MikM 2 Replies Last reply
                        • brendaB brenda

                          @89th said in Advice:

                          Wow some good nuggets in there!

                          @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up!

                          Excellent! We finally got ours here a couple days ago, but the metro area has had them for about three weeks already. You are so spoiled having them come to your area so early!

                          89th8 Offline
                          89th8 Offline
                          89th
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #35

                          @brenda Oh the feeder is up. No hummers yet, though. That being said, I'm lucky, outside my office window I watch cardinals, chickadees, and robins, all day.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • HoraceH Horace

                            @AndyD said in Advice:

                            Why do women never take the bins out, never check the car tyres, water?

                            That's the most British sentence ever written on this board.

                            jon-nycJ Online
                            jon-nycJ Online
                            jon-nyc
                            wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                            #36

                            @Horace said in Advice:

                            @AndyD said in Advice:

                            Why do women never take the bins out, never check the car tyres, water?

                            That's the most British sentence ever written on this board.

                            Meh. I can beat that.

                            Why do women never take the bins out and never check the car tyres, mate?

                            Only non-witches get due process.

                            • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                            HoraceH 1 Reply Last reply
                            • brendaB brenda

                              @89th said in Advice:

                              Wow some good nuggets in there!

                              @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up!

                              Excellent! We finally got ours here a couple days ago, but the metro area has had them for about three weeks already. You are so spoiled having them come to your area so early!

                              MikM Offline
                              MikM Offline
                              Mik
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #37

                              @brenda said in Advice:

                              @89th said in Advice:

                              Wow some good nuggets in there!

                              @brenda First, my hummingbird feeder is up!

                              Excellent! We finally got ours here a couple days ago, but the metro area has had them for about three weeks already. You are so spoiled having them come to your area so early!

                              We just got our first sighting today at lunch!

                              “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                                @Horace said in Advice:

                                @AndyD said in Advice:

                                Why do women never take the bins out, never check the car tyres, water?

                                That's the most British sentence ever written on this board.

                                Meh. I can beat that.

                                Why do women never take the bins out and never check the car tyres, mate?

                                HoraceH Offline
                                HoraceH Offline
                                Horace
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #38

                                @jon-nyc said in Advice:

                                @Horace said in Advice:

                                @AndyD said in Advice:

                                Why do women never take the bins out, never check the car tyres, water?

                                That's the most British sentence ever written on this board.

                                Meh. I can beat that.

                                Why do women never take the bins out and never check the car tyres, mate?

                                You're a smart guy. Not sure about the rest.

                                Education is extremely important.

                                A 1 Reply Last reply
                                • HoraceH Horace

                                  @jon-nyc said in Advice:

                                  @Horace said in Advice:

                                  @AndyD said in Advice:

                                  Why do women never take the bins out, never check the car tyres, water?

                                  That's the most British sentence ever written on this board.

                                  Meh. I can beat that.

                                  Why do women never take the bins out and never check the car tyres, mate?

                                  You're a smart guy. Not sure about the rest.

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  AndyD
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #39

                                  https://goodnewsplanet.com/understanding-women-now-paperback/

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                                  • 89th8 89th

                                    @Aqua-Letifer

                                    I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

                                    Irregardless... (ok just kidding, I know you hate that), I'll try hard to look at the emotions behind these fights. However I know her, it's tough for her to sit down and discuss our egos, our emotions, our trust... We trust each other, we know each other very well, and if I even want to talk about yesterday's fight, she'll just say she doesn't want to talk about it.

                                    The next time your wife gets that way, get her to tell you more. Literally say, “okay, and what else?” (God help you if you say it sarcastically or start to defend yourself. This isn’t about that.) If she gets defensive, she’s either scared about confiding thoughts she feels she shouldn’t have, or doesn’t trust you or both. Gotta get past that shit.

                                    We will see. A great example is we have about 10 thank-you cards to write. She's been wanting to write them for a few weeks. I have offered to just do them. Not in a mean way, but she's made it clear she wants to be there when we write them so that we do it together, she includes her gratitude, etc. Normally this would be fine, but I can guarantee at some point if the thank you cards come up as a topic, she'll make a comment about how I could've just taken charge and written them, even though I specifically am waiting since I know she wants to be involved. Another minor, but clear, example that we are struggling with communication.

                                    JollyJ Offline
                                    JollyJ Offline
                                    Jolly
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #40

                                    @89th said in Advice:

                                    @Aqua-Letifer

                                    I appreciate the reply and the perspectives. The rational vs emotional aspect... I get it, but it's hard for me to apply it to the scenario such as yesterday. We were all going to the baseball practice, then my wife said she wanted to stay home. Ok cool. Then she said she'll go. Ok cool. Wait, it's time to pack up and go? She specifically decided she wanted to go but now she is stressed about where things are (such as the baby carrier or sunscreen), and for her to make statements about "I have to do everything" or "Where is the carrier, you had it last!" or "Why did you get Jimmy Johns after all?", it is hard for me to chalk that up to emotions, although I'm sure it is. For me, it's poor communication. How do I talk to her about shifting those blame/insults to something like "Hey can you help me find the carrier?" and dropping the insults?

                                    Irregardless... (ok just kidding, I know you hate that), I'll try hard to look at the emotions behind these fights. However I know her, it's tough for her to sit down and discuss our egos, our emotions, our trust... We trust each other, we know each other very well, and if I even want to talk about yesterday's fight, she'll just say she doesn't want to talk about it.

                                    The next time your wife gets that way, get her to tell you more. Literally say, “okay, and what else?” (God help you if you say it sarcastically or start to defend yourself. This isn’t about that.) If she gets defensive, she’s either scared about confiding thoughts she feels she shouldn’t have, or doesn’t trust you or both. Gotta get past that shit.

                                    We will see. A great example is we have about 10 thank-you cards to write. She's been wanting to write them for a few weeks. I have offered to just do them. Not in a mean way, but she's made it clear she wants to be there when we write them so that we do it together, she includes her gratitude, etc. Normally this would be fine, but I can guarantee at some point if the thank you cards come up as a topic, she'll make a comment about how I could've just taken charge and written them, even though I specifically am waiting since I know she wants to be involved. Another minor, but clear, example that we are struggling with communication.

                                    Shee-it...You call that fightin'? My wife is part French, part Scot. She can dish it out. Me? I got enough coonass in me, I'd rather fight than eat.

                                    BTW, my wife's nickname is Saint.

                                    We tied up in the hospital, post CABG, day two. You, son, are an amateur.

                                    But don't ever not love your wife. And don't ever not be there, when she really needs you. As she should love you and be there for you.

                                    As for understanding women, I've only been married to this lady for 43 years and we dated four years before we married. I'm still trying to figure her out. Probably never will, as that's half the fun. 🤣

                                    “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                    Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

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