Recent forum posts (all topics)

  • Recently Learned I am ADHD by: Rbraun10 10 years 10 months ago

    So i figuratively had my wife put a "gun to my head" and tell me she was not in love with me anymore and she was thinking about leaving.  This was the same conversation we have about every 6-9 months, but this time it was different.  We live a good life, based on what I have read I am a high functioning ADHD'er.  I own a  successful company, have two great kids with no symptoms that I can see, we live in Newport, RI and my father in law lives with us.  My wife is a beautiful, smart, organized and driven woman.  She is also the adult child of an alcoholic, and her mother passed away 11 years ago and she was likely bi-polar/manic. Needless to say before I rolled around, my wife was already the parent.  Recently, her father came ill and she just turned 40.  She looked in the mirror and said "is this my life"  I have a husband that won't listen, pay me attention, would prefer to drink beers with his friends and I do not feel safe.  ( all questions many of us have asked over time)  As she approached me with her feelings, i was initially blind-sided, I mean I know we were not intimate, but I am not abusive (other way around) I carry my share of the workload around the house and I had cared for her ailing father when she was forced to travel.  All the while her only sibling was hiding north of boston (for the second time- first was when her mother was sick)

    Anyway, I was pissed, how dare she say that she does not love me anymore, how could she not, I have taken care of her sick mother and father ( he has lived with us for the past 7 years) I  am an earner and people around us think I am a great guy and fun to be around.  What I failed to realize was that I was not satisfying her needs what so ever, to feel safe and to feel loved.  (I did not recognize this until I had a gun to my head)

    So at this counseling session and seeking follow-up opinions discover I have adhd.  Boy did it make a lot of sense as I look back on my academic career, my dependence on alcohol, the symptom-response-response environment in my home, it was my wife and I to a T.  I am currently seeing an individual counselor that specializes in ADHD and my wife and I are currently interviewing (for lack of a better term) couples therapists. 

    One of the challenges or (things that i am obsessing about) is that I feel that my wife is not interested in being a willing participant.  She said so in our first meeting with a therapist and I will chalk that up to anger, not knowing I was ADHD and ultimately not knowing if she can take the "pushing the rock up the hill" life anymore.  I get that I do, but I am also 100% committed to doing whatever I can to improve myself and hopefully our lives together.  I have not yet confided in her that I was prescribed medication to help with the ADHD for fear that she will view it as a scape-goat (response)  I have not pressured her into seeking her own individual counseling which I feel would do her a world of good.  I guess I do not know where to start to open up to her in fear that she will not listen and respect my thoughts ( this is ironic because I have 10 employees that would run through walls for me).

    I am sending her away next week for a solo vacation for 4 days and I want to write her a letter with all my thoughts and where I am coming from, so she really has something to think about while away from the hassle of home (Should I?) or should I let her marinate and just relax.  I want her to read ADHD and marriage book, but this is something that she needs to want to do on her own.  Lastly, I know she is not having an affair, but I am having a tough time living in the present and not creating worst case scenarios in my mind. 

     

    Any advice would be great,because I am eager and hopeful that we can turn this ship around with a lot of hard work. She is a remarkable person and I want to grow old with her.

    Thx

  • my ADD partner wants to separate from me by: carrieannn 10 years 10 months ago

    Hi, I'm new to this site.  My life is turned upside down right now, so I'm trying to get a little support any way I can. My ADD husband just told me that he wants to separate, that he fell out of love with me and that there's no chance of working things out.  Even though our marriage has been less than perfect for the past couple years, and I even thought about separation sometimes myself, I am still devastated.  He said that I just make him feel bad about himself, and that he deserves to be happy.  I know I have become overly critical, unhappy and have lost patience with him because of our problems, but he didn't seem to have any insight into his contribution to our problems. He has many wonderful characteristics and I would be willing to go the therapy route if he would.  But I do wonder if it's hopeless. He seems determined that we're over. He was diagnosed late in his teens with ADD and didn't get any treatment other than ritalin at the time.  He had a very unsupportive home life.  He has actually done ok in his life professionally, but everything else is a mess.  Early on in our marriage I convinced him to see a therapist, but that didn't last long, and he didn't want to be on medicine at all.  Even the one piece of advice the therapist managed to impart was to exercise everyday, but my husband won't even do that. To vent some of my emotions today I made a list of the things that caused us problems (not saying that I'm perfect at all), just wondering if these are typical ADD characteristics.  What do you think?  Is my marriage a lost cause, even if I could convince him to go to counselling with me?

    -He's self-centered.  He complains to me everyday about all the bad things that happened that day, a bad driver on the way to work, a co-worker, his son (my stepson), and never asks how my day was.

    -He doesn't pull his weight at home, unless I nag him.  He just does'nt notice when something need doing like taking the gargbage out, so it inevitably gets done by me...at which point he often says "oh, I was going to do that"

    He is unmotivated.  He rarely initiates any home improvement projects, chores, meal planning and shopping etc. But if its something fun that he likes to do like playing video games he'll put in endless hours and effort.

    He cannot seem to take care of himself other that basic hygiene.  He won't work out, go to the doctor or dentist or financial planner

    He resents having to put any effort into our intimate relationship  "I shouldn't have to light candles, give massages, play music, it shouldn't be that hard"

    He spends money recklessly and impulsively and has no savings, he lives paycheck to paycheck even though he makes a decent living and has little debt...where does it all go? take-out, impulse purchases, alcohol, overspending on hobbies and entertainment.

    -indecision over everything.  he changes his mind back and forth so many times, and he gets mad at me when I comment on his flip-flopping. It's so hard to make plans when he can't decide anything until the last minute.

    he has a short fuse and loses patience if some chore takes longer than a couple minutes. or he gets distracted and spends an hour re-arranging a closet that was fine as it was, while I'm left doing everything else.

    - he is undependable.  He often doesn't follow through on promises because he forgot.

     Ok, I think I've vented enough.  Thanks for reading...any of your thoughts/advice would be much appreciated.

     

  • The effect of stress on ADHD symptoms - how to get through it, strategies? by: Redsoft 10 years 10 months ago

    What a year. We got married in August and are now living with his parents after serious financial fallout. Ups and downs like crazy. Simultaneously one of the best and worst years of my life so, obviously, stressful, draining. Didn't exactly see myself being a housewife and living with my in-laws 4 months into marriage. (Especially when we've already been together so long. Man, that's some bad timing. Thanks, life!)

    I've been with him for about 5 years now, so we've been around the bend together a few times. Stress has always made his ADHD symptoms worse; rather, his coping strategies go out the window. 

    He hides things from me because of my depression, anxiety, and other disorders, operating under the idea that he doesn't want to stress me out or make me feel worse. Of course, this completely backfires, as something even of minor stress may happen, but then I'm left guessing for a week about what I did wrong or knowing that he's keeping something from me. I wouldn't care as much if he didn't turn into a different, explosive, intolerant person as he feels more and more inwardly overwhelmed.

    For instance, last week, we forgot about a certain auto-payment, and it over-drafted our account a bit. Of course it's stressful and frustrating, but it's done, and there is little to do about it... but it's easy in that you know exactly what needs to be done. This was churning him up inside for a week, a blow to his self-esteem (since he believes he should be making six figures to be a good husband for some reason). I ended up crying again and he came out with it... "I'm just stressed from all of this stuff going on obviously, but we over-drafted last week."   Me: "Couldn't you have told me that :then:? One sentence, done, and I'd know what's going on. And you ALWAYS feel better once you've talked about things, instantly. Instead, I've been in pain and struggling to figure out what happened or if I've been doing something wrong." He apologizes, I encourage him to talk to me in the future. Same ol'. 

    ...He always says he won't do it again, always does. He is very supportive of me when I need to talk about things, and has said that I reciprocate completely, that he always feels good about it, loved. So, it's just frustrating when something like this happens... One week of turmoil ending in tears or 10 minutes of unfortunate mourning?

    Because of his desires to keep me out of the loop for what he deems is my own good, he shuts me out almost completely during the mysterious span of his concealment, just as he does when under general stress. It just compounds when another factor is added. Considering we've had this bad level of stress since September, it's gotten trying. I'm doing my best to stay patient - I'm feeling the stress too. I understand. Without me even mentioning it to them, the entire family on both sides senses his stress level and that something is different about him, and I am frequently asked if he is feeling less stressed since we are now on the path out of the woods. The relief lasted about two weeks before he took on new worries to stack on his shoulders.

    What has been hurting me most is him telling me to stop talking. "Shut up." "Shh!" "Stop. Just stop!" "Okay, okay, okay, I get it." If I try to continue, I am interrupted and told again, as a child would be when "talking back." If I say anything after :that:, he goes off, "Oh my GOD. Just shut. UP!" and rolls his eyes. (The "omg" is the cherry on the cake - completely dehumanizes me after instantly pissing me off before.) He is already loud, and gets louder to yelling level at me, which not only raises my anxiety level but my anger problems surface, and I really feel like I'm going to punch him straight in the face, and wouldn't feel sorry...I don't take disrespect of anyone well, so especially myself. We end up not talking. Why would I want to anyway when I'm just told to stop or shut up? I can never tell what will set it off. Talk about eggshells. So I find myself not talking to him...not on purpose as a cold shoulder, simply from anxiety and being mentally beaten down, feeling like whatever I say will just be upsetting or useless, like I am the last person in the world he wants to be around or hear. Which then has :me: holding things in, afraid to say :anything: to avoid feeling how I do when he reacts again.

    It came to a head a couple days ago - he crossed the line. I was trying to tell him about something that he needed to hear (truly, an impending event for the morning), and he told me to stop. I said he needed to listen because it was important for the here and now. He told me no, whatever, just stop. I got a few words into it anyway..."Okay, okay, I get it," which was impossible given what little I'd said. I tried to speak up and say how hurtful he was being. He asked me why I was being such a b****. When asked why he felt like that, he told me to shut up. I'd had enough - I said no, that he can't just not listen to things he doesn't want to hear. (THAT is always when he seems to do it, even if it's something stupid like, "There are clean spoons in the dishwasher.")

    I just broke, admittedly childish (or maybe just finally forced fully into a corner, I'm not sure), and kept countering with "no" or my own "stop" as he continued...I didn't know what else to say. Meanwhile...this is all taking place in his parents' loft over an echoing living area. His mother was close by, easily within hearing distance of just :regular: speaking volumes. I was whispering the entire time, even just mouthing, trying to keep the matter private, and he was shouting, telling me to stop and shut up, louder and louder, told me to stop being a b****, and to shut up some more. I'm talking :yelling:. I removed myself from the situation, went to our room. I don't really get embarrassed...but that certainly did it, although it took a few minutes to kick in, to realize the weight of it...plus my inner ember took blaze. I cry when I'm really furious, so I don't put holes in the walls. He essentially debased and invalidated me in front of someone, and his :mother: at that. There wasn't anything left for me to do at that point but just cry for an hour, powerless in no matter what I do. 

    We had a long talk afterward, and he apologized without prompt, bringing me dinner he cooked for us while I had my alone time. (It's also difficult transitioning with the rubberbanding of his moods. I don't calm down quickly at all, and sometimes it actually feels offensive that he's "over it" already for some major things...it's like, we are NOT okay!) We talked about how what he did was so painful to me, and why. The next morning, I gave him Melissa's article "The Care and Feeding of a Non-ADHD Spouse," which really seemed to hit home for him. He asked me to email it to him too, saying he wanted to have it to reread sometimes. This gave me so much hope. In the time since that incident, he has been really aware, as have I. But this has happened before, after reading ADHD and Marriage and Is it You, Me or ADD?, and yet that wore off too, as other things had in the past.

    I'll be continuing to try my best - I definitely understand how a person can be "controlled" by their brain - but my gut unfortunately tells me this glowing span of time will be over in an :instant: some morning sooner than later. He'd done the "shushing" in the past but not as strongly, and I'd gotten him to realize the hurt but, again, it wasn't as severe then, and stress wasn't as heightened. So, I have good reason to believe this will pop up again...We are still early on in the behavior re-training of our relationship. 

    Also, he does the classic ADHD mishearing or not focusing on conversation...hearing partially or incorrectly. I've noticed he only listens to/takes away what he expected or wanted to hear, not my actual words, or will get frustrated when not said how he seems to have wanted. Missing or not applying context is especially, bad. Me: "I just cleaned the big mugs." Him: "Oh, okay, cool." Me:"Can you please put them away? I can't reach the top shelf." Him:"Put what away?" ...This has caused a LOT of problems, but more in less trivial scenarios like, Me: "You are being very inconsiderate right no--" Him: "What?! How can you say I'm an inconsiderate person?!" ...He doesn't recognize the "you are being" and "right now" referencing the specific present situation, only that I am speaking at him and said the word "inconsiderate."  So, even when he doesn't tell me to shut up, I can't "get it right" anyway. He is always getting frustrated, saying things like "I don't understand what you're saying/talk about at all"...and then just removes his engagement of focus because it's apparently too difficult for him. (I mean that without sarcasm). 

    He also makes zero effort to keep focus on me for more than, say, 15 or 20 minutes. We are both very avid gamers, so I get the desire to play and explore...but not if it's hurting a relationship. Even if we play a game together, and we're having a fantastic and fun time together (something rare and precious these days), he'll suddenly say he wants to go play his own game, out of the blue. When stressed, he checks out. Being locked onto a screen is his drug of choice to stay numb, and human interaction during is out of the question. Talk about feeling rejected. Even when playing together, lose out to the PC, again ...Why am I even here? I feel unwanted and not worth spending time with, or like time spent with me is far less important than [insert material method of checking out here]. As silly as it is, even the genre difference hurts, hah...I choose games that take mental investment, strategy, puzzle solving...he chooses mindless, repetitive games during this time. Even more hurtful that a :mindless: activity takes him away, for me. 

    What can I do? How can I make things better (see: functional) again in this time of stress and into the future? Are there different communication techniques during those times that work better? It feels impossible and like I'm emotionally powerless (down on myself/dehumanizing/beaten down) with his coping mechanisms out of place. As a couple, figuratively tied together, it feels like we are trying to escape drowning, but I'm the only one moving my limbs, like carrying dead weight, while he yells at me that he doesn't know where we're going and that I swim wrong. I don't want to be controlling and don't :like: being controlling - it's not in my personality. So, it's frustrating having to point us both in the right direction(s) as it takes some serious energy for me. Is there a way to simply encourage him to take hold of his own direction? I've tried talking up his self-esteem, but you can probably guess at this point what I get told.

    There is just so much frustration and anger beneath and above the surface. At this point, some resentment too. I could stop trying altogether, to let him go down with the ship if that's what he's set on doing, but... as a spouse, someone that loves him, I can't just do that. He's not functional in any way when stressed like this, so it's not like I'm condemning his methods or some kind of inefficiency - he has no methods. Not trying at this point is abandonment. 

    Just really frustrated, sad, and desperate to figure out strategies for our present situation. I feel small, ineffectual, and like I've done so much work already, only to be forced to start from scratch. Instead of a wife, I feel like a girl who's pining for a guy not really into her. 

  • My husband says I'm a Bit** by: frustratedwife 10 years 10 months ago

    My ADHD husband calls me a bit** all the time.  He says I'm bitter and I complain about everything.  He's right, I have turned into a miserable woman.  But how much can one person take without completely losing it?  In our 7 year marriage he has had over 30 jobs, most of which only lasted a few weeks or a few months.  He only helps around the house when I force him too.  He hasn't done any upkeep on our 30 year old home and it's in need of lots of repairs.  He sits around all day and talks about all the things he wants to do and tells me how much money he can make when he finds the right job.  I'm so tired of all the talk and no action!  I'm about ready to explode!  I'm exhausted all the time and always having to worry about making ends meet and how we are going to afford the repairs on the house.  I know my friends and family think I'm insane for staying with this man.  My siblings all have wonderful hard working spouses and nice lives so it's really hard to be struggling all the time.  Before I married my husband I had a nice life.  I took a couple of vacations a year and I had a savings and some investments and was prepared for emergencies that might happen.  He basically had nothing when we met.  He blamed it on his divorce, said his ex wife got everything, but now I know that's not the reason.  Someone has always stepped up to take care of him and now I've done the same thing.  I've spent all my savings and cashed in all my investments to finance all his business ideas in hopes he would find something he would stick with.  He has a business degree but has never used it and at his age (53) it's really hard to start all over in a new career.  He recently got a job but had to have a minor surgery so he couldn't start it for a couple of weeks.  Now that it's time to go to work he's telling me the pay isn't good enough and he's going to go visit his parents (all the way on the other side of the country) and take care of some family business (which should have been taken care of years ago) and look for work while he is there.  Even if he finds a job there I have no idea how he is going to manage because he can't live with his parents so he will have to find a place to stay and that costs money that he doesn't have.  I keep trying to explain to him that he has to make A LOT more money if we are going to maintain separate households and that it would be more practical to take a lesser paying job near home.  I also remind him that he hates being alone and will not want to stay there by himself for long so why bother with the expense of relocating.  But then he tells me I'm trying to control him and all I do is bit** at him for everything he wants to do.  It's like dealing with a child and my frustration is going through the roof.  He uses no common sense and it's driving me crazy!

    I just needed to vent this morning, I really feel like he has turned me into an insane woman.  I've had good advice from people on this forum about how to deal with this but I'm still not handling it well.  UGH!

     

     

     

  • I used to blissfully ignorant to my impact on our marriage by: Jeff413 10 years 10 months ago

    I have been diagnosed with ADHD about 4 years ago and have been married for 18 years and have two kids. I have been put on Adderall XR that has helped at work.

    About a month ago I had an true life changing eye opening experience and have been made painfully aware of how my anger and other ADD issues have been affecting my wife and family. Now I can't stop hyper focusing on how terrible I have been in the past. My guilt/shame is so bad I can barely eat some days. I keep replaying all the past fights I can remember over and over in my head. And almost all of them come down to me over reacting to something stupid. Then not thinking through my thoughts before blurting out something hurtful or cutting off my wife while she is trying to talk. Finally losing my temper and blowing my top.

    Now every time we have a fight, I'm aware my mistakes right after I do them but the damage is done. And my wife has told me that she almost ready to leave me.

    The guilt of what have done and am doing has me depressed to the point of wishing for that I will just not wake up one morning or have same freak accident. I don't want to kill myself I just feel that I don't deserve to keep hurting the ones I love and care for so if I can't stop doing this I don't deserve to exist. I'm sure this is just the depression coming to the surface. But it does concern me that it could get worse. I know that it would have to get a lot worse for me to do anything to myself. But it still scares me how bad it could get. 

    I don't want to keep doing these things and I don't want to keep hurting my family verbally. I have made an appointment with my Dr. but this is the 3rd one I've had since my diagnosis. So I have to keep retelling my story. This time however feel I can share more than I have been able to in the past. I don't feel my dark side is something to hide but to exposed to the light so it can be eliminated.

    I'm looking for anyone how has made it though something like this.

     

  • Extreme senses/sensitivity to stimuli by: lynninny 10 years 10 months ago

    So, divorce from my ex with untreated ADHD is almost final, after leaving with kids a year ago. Working on co-parenting, which usually consists of me managing and taking care of everything and him contributing what he can when he can. Which is actually fine. We get along reasonably well and the kids are happy. 

    I continue to unravel the past and figure things out--hindsight is always good when we learn from it, right? And this one aspect of his behavior keeps rearing its head. I would like to be able to understand it and explain it to my children. For now I just ignore it--it used to drive me crazy and embarrass me, but now I just find it curious. Has anyone else experience this? 

    My ex spouse definitely has ADHD, and maybe a few other things going on--bipolar disorder, depression, OCD, asperger's? I don't know. But he responds extremely strongly to various stimuli. For example, bad smells may make most of us cover our mouths, but he starts gagging, tears roll down his cheeks, and he makes loud retching noises. Everything from a dirty diaper to bad garbage made him do this (convenient, huh?) He once swallowed some food the wrong way and ended up rolling around and thrashing in the floor, clutching his throat. A friend saw it and asked if we should call 911. "No, he just does that," I answered. It is just really melodramatic and beyond attention-seeking. It is like there is something mentally wrong, maybe ill about it. Several friends and family members have asked me if this is for real? Small injury to his knee? Limping around with a cane and getting a handicapped tag for his car. He also looks up the worst thing that could possibly happen, medically, for everything and sometimes scares our kids with it. (Surgery for a pinched nerve? Could result in paralysis and he will never walk again). 

    It is worst when he is in pain or sick. A cold leaves him making the most crazy retching and coughing noises, again with tears running down his cheeks. It is a bit annoying when I am trying to pay attention to our kids or he is canceling out of an overnight with them at the last minute. 

    There has to be some explanation for this. Honestly, I don't think it's for attention. I think there is something that makes him over-react like crazy to things like this. And forget talking about it. I tried a few times and he freaked out and said I was accusing him of lying. Worst fights ever. Once I rolled my eyes at him (which is not very nice, I admit, but I had just had a Cesarean and was up all night and breastfeeding and couldn't take it any more). Well, I was the meanest human being who has ever lived. He absolutely freaks out if someone calls his credibility into question. 

    So, I just let it go, and try to ignore it now, but it happened again this morning and I know the kids are going to start asking about it at some point. Any ideas?
    Thanks, everyone. 

  • Feeling neglected and put down. by: Mary Ann168 10 years 10 months ago

    My husband and I have been married for six months.  We were together for 5 yrs and engaged two of those years. I did notice signs of ADHD while dating, but it wasn't constant.  Since being married my husband is constantly distracted.  I can never seem to have him focus on me/on our relationship.  I constantly feel like I am put on the backburner and that everyone and everything else is more important than I am.  I cry often, because I miss my husband and want to see that I am important to him.  He is genuinely sorry and does his best to fix things, but that is just for the moment.  As soon as I think things are getting worked out and I smile, I am just ignored all over again.  Also, I am constantly 2nd guessed on everything I say, suggest, or do.  I feel like (in his eyes) I can not do and say anything right.  I am constantly corrected and my sentences are rephrased by him.  I feel like he is so selfish while I am mostly selfless. I often hear about his wants and I always give in with a smile on my face and in my heart.  I never hear him care or suggest things that would make me happy.  When we finally do things that make me happy, he seems disinterested and/or crabby about it.  The combination of these actions has worn me out. I feel like my shine is gone.  I am no longer happy.  It has been along time since I have felt happy.  I cry often, I have put on weight since, and I feel so lonely and neglected.  I know he loves me and he hates how I am feeling, but the more we try the more hurt I become.  He was diagnosed with ADHD as a child.  I think it is the cause for our marriage being where it is at today.  I do not want to give up on us and I will not.  I need some advice/tools as soon as possible.  I can not take another day feeling like this.  I feel everyday is taking a bigger toll on our marriage.  If anyone could offer any advice to us, I would greatly appreciate it!!! We are planning for a family and I refuse to bring a baby into a place where I am sad and confused.

  • Forgetfulness is so hurtful by: MFrances 10 years 10 months ago

    My husband (the partner with ADD) has a terrible problem remembering things, but primarily anything that has to deal with me or the kids.  Whether important, like a neurologist appt for our son, or not so important.  For Christmas, my husband actually forgot all about my present.  He actually ordered it himself, the coffee pot I showed him online.  I guess I should be happy that he actually ordered it himself, usually I order my presents on my own.  When it came he wouldn't let me see it, even though I knew what it was.  I thought, wow, I might actually get a wrapped present this year.  No such luck.  The box has been in the basement for a week (out of sight out of mind for him).  Christmas morning, it's still in the basement in the same shipping box.  He never even brought it upstairs.  When the kids were done with their presents, I went downstairs and got it out of the shipping box and brought it up myself.  He never even apologized.  But that doesn't matter-how can you make up for forgetting your spouses' present?  To make it worse, my daughter saw the coffee pot and asked about it, I can't remember her exact words but she knew he forgot and didn't even wrap it for me.  Then she says, that is really mean.  I didn't know what to say to her about that.  Yes, it is mean.  He gets mad if I try to tell him that his forgetting makes me feel like he doesn't care.  He thinks he cares so there is no problem.  My sister died in July, somewhat unexpectedly.  He has not once asked my how I am doing, not even after her funeral.  Not during Thanksgiving or Christmas, my first holidays without her.  Not once.  It's like for him it never happened.  I'm just so fed up and very hurt.  What do you do when your spouse doesn't think anything is wrong and doesn't believe you when you try to talk about what bothers you?

  • ADHD spouse seems to be floundering; can I do anything? by: PoisonIvy 10 years 11 months ago

    My husband's main source of income the past three years has been from providing companionship and some caregiving to his ailing elderly parents.  H has somewhat typical ADHD behaviors and symptoms:  difficulty keeping a good job; financial problems; denial of responsibility for his role in problems; difficulties with communication and intimacy; avoidance of certain kinds of responsibilities and tasks; comorbid mental health issues (depression and anxiety).  We have been living apart this fall but he was home this weekend because our daughters had just arrived for the holidays.  Both were out of the country all fall and will be home for no more than 2 weeks.  

    This weekend, my husband told me the following:  (1) his father didn't want him to come home to see our daughters; (2) his father often expresses resentment about or resistance to paying my husband; (3) my husband has stopped taking his medications (and hasn't seen his therapist since this summer); (4) my husband doesn't want my help with exploring other long-term care options for his parents because "there are no other options" (his words); (5) my offer to help support my husband financially if he were to quit his current job (as caregiver) is insulting; and (6) my husband considers his situation to be hopeless.

    I no longer think our marriage can be preserved or is even worth preserving.  But I'm concerned about my husband.  Can or should I do anything?  Is it him or his illness talking when he says he doesn't want any help from me?  

  • No contact by: lemonbomb 10 years 11 months ago

    content removed at the request of poster

     

     

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