annotatedbom wrote: ↑Thu Feb 18, 2021 6:20 pm
This is great news Linked! I hope she really does prefer staying together.
moksha wrote: ↑Fri Feb 19, 2021 12:17 am
Lining up a lawyer with briefs against both French and Italian roasts? Let's hope she has come to her senses about this coffee nonsense!
Will keep our fingers crossed for you. Best wishes.
Thanks! Things are looking good.
Cnsl1 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 19, 2021 1:54 am
Obviously there are at least two sides to every story, but in the version you've presented, your DW is selfish, judgmental, and emotionally very immature. Also probably carrying around a lot of anxiety.
Her biggest concern is what the church neighbors will think?
Not even that her family won't be together forever, but just that her family will be looked upon differently by the church community. {Mind Blown}
Also obviously there will be a good deal of this church community that won't give a crap whether you drink coffee or not. Some will love it cuz that'll give them something to gossip about.
Your DW is probably in that latter group since she's worried about becoming the social pariah.
She probably does not want to know any of your reasons for disaffection. She'd rather not know if it's not true. Fear and anxiety.
I know people like this.
Emotional growth and maturity doesn't come easy or without sweat and tears.
Yeah, I struggle understand the full picture, and struggle to convey even what I understand here. But I don't think you are wrong in your assessment, though I do think she's a pretty good lady in spite of it. She was raised a certain way and she's trying to be the best person she can be. My efforts are to get her to come out of that box enough to understand me and appreciate how I'm trying to be the best person I can be.
DW is both totally selfless and very selfish at the same time. Everything she does is for someone else. Whether me or the kids or the ward or her parents/siblings/grandma or the community at large. My take is that she does this because she has core values to stay busy, to be responsible, and is uncomfortable thinking about her own wants and needs. Because those are her core values she thinks that down time is bad, and being selective in what commitments one makes/keeps is bad. She feels that taking care of herself is selfish. She thinks that taking large amounts of time to understand is a waste of time. She is very much a doer, and not a thinker. (She is smart, I'm not knocking her intellect, she just prefers to be doing rather than thinking about stuff). The church is great for people like that. They give them plenty to do, too much even. A doer will never have to stop and think with the church guiding them. And DW has definitely internalized that doing what the church says and silently encourages is RIGHT. You are right, these characteristics do not lead to a well developed emotional maturity. Sometimes I feel like she acts like a teenager. But in her way she is awesome and amazing. She does so much and at a great sacrifice to herself. Just not as great a cost as addressing her wants and needs, and really taking time to understand the situation.
We are all judgmental, it's the most human thing there is. I think the real question is what criteria one uses to judge. For DW, it's those things in her core values and the church. Based on her criteria I am just a crappy person. I'm very much a thinker, so she considers that laziness and lack of motivation. I take care of myself as needed so I'm lazy and selfish. I am always assessing what my wants are, if they are appropriate, and updating them. On top of that, I push her to own her wants and needs in the way she asks for things, which adds me being annoying to just being a bad person. As part of the high emotions last week I made an emotional case for her to stop thinking that I am a terrible person.
DW is very socially anxious. That's why what the neighbors think matters to her. She's also worried about what her family thinks. She's worried her mom will get depressed. And she's worried that her sister will hold it over her that she has the perfect family and DW doesn't. And as a SAHM that social circle is all she has. I don't think it's as easy as saying that she shouldn't care what people think about her.
She has definitely preferred avoiding my reasons for disaffection. She gets depressed for a week if we talk about it in depth.
But things seem a little different after the tough discussions last week. She has been more open to saying what she wants. She has been more genuinely loving to me than ever; snuggling and reaching for my hand. Maybe we made some progress.
Just This Guy wrote: ↑Fri Feb 19, 2021 7:22 am
Linked, do you live in Utah/ the Moridor?
The reason I ask is it sounds like the coffee drinking is has more impact from a social acceptance standpoint than it id from a behavioral impact standpoint to your DW.
If it is Utah, realistically, how accepted is coffee drinking? I don't know. The only part of Utah I have seen in the last 18 years is layovers in the SLC airport. My understanding is that with the decline of TBMs and the rise of large groups of ex-mo's, coffee and other things are gaining more social acceptance.
So are you in a community that is still more conservative on acceptance of what people drink, or is your DW projecting some of her feelings and bias on other people?
Yeah, I'm in Utah. If I were to drink coffee at work no one would care. But if my in-laws saw it it would be like dropping a nuclear bomb on the idea that we are good mormon people. It really is about the control aspect, and that if I am breaking that rule then I must be very lost, which in their view I am (if they knew, which they don't at DW's request). DW does also have some minor concerns about the health impacts of the insidious bean drink; she asked me if I'm addicted like it was meth.