Thanks for your post Enlightened_Ex. You have stated many of the things my husband says, and I still just dont understand that point of view.
If your goal is understanding, then the DJ's from you will continue. After all, I suspect he doesn't understand your point of view either. I think that contributes to the DJ's.
So instead of trying to understand his point of view, why not offer him the same thing you want, ACCEPT that he has a point of view as well.
Just as your efforts and point of view are valuable, his are too. If your goal is understanding, then I don't think you'll get very far. If your goal is to build romantic love, then it's more about how you act. I don't think you fell in love because you understood his point of view. You fell in love because you did things that built romantic love.
I'd focus more on accepting things, rather than understanding.
A concrete example, I don't need to understand why my wife turns the thermostat up to 85 when she's cold. She does it. I "know" it won't make the house warmer, and pretty soon she'll complain that it's too hot. But I accept that that is how her mind works. Perhaps she thinks it's like a throttle. But then that begs the question why she doesn't operate the oven that way.
The point is, I don't have to understand that contradiction to love her.
When he says "you should have" I don't always agree that I "should" have been doing what he says. I or it may be that I've done what I feel is the best I can given my schedule, and his "should haves" disregard my efforts.
Practice the following phrase, "You may be right."
It's always true. It's not saying he is right, it's not saying he's not. Trying to determine "who is right" will not lead to romantic love.
I am the type of person who finishes what I set my mind to. I've had a disconnect when it comes to organizing and decorating in a certain part of my home due to time, money, and honestly my husbands negative feedback to my attempts at decor. I think I'm very good at it and so do many others. In fact, I finished the bathroom last week, and my husband thought I'd done a great job (even though just a couple of weeks prior he had said that the paintings I'd picked weren't exactly "bathroom" type pictures.). I'm not sure what behaviors he thinks I can prevent since I'm a well accomplished person who does as much as reasonably possible while working from home and handling 3 busy kids. I don't feel he is understanding and reasonable in this area.
My short answer is, So?
If your approach annoys him, it is an annoying habit, no matter how creative or talented you or your friends might find it. He is the one married to you and he has to live in the home as well. If your creative process destroys romantic love, then is that good for your marriage?
I'm not saying change the process, I'm suggesting that you stop justifying your process and consider the impact is has on your husband.
Just as you want him to stop saying, "You should have...." if the process annoys him, then knock it off. It doesn't matter the outcome. If you are destroying romantic love in the process is the price too high for the outcome?
Let's turn the tables. What if when your husband says, "You should have..." it was the "right" answer. But you are hurt and do not feel loved and cherished when he says that. Should he continue to say that because in the end, he was right, his way was better?
Of course not. So the same is true with your process you justify here. It doesn't matter how great you and your friends say it is if it's a LB from your husband's perspective.
The state of a couple of rooms upstairs bothers us BOTH but he knows I have to do things slowly.
So are you suggesting that knowing is the solution. OK, I'll ask you to apply your standard. You know your husband says, "You should..." therefore, since you know that's his process, you should just accept it. Yes, I sad you should.
He admitted later that he was just upset that the picture had been damaged, and he said he came about sharing his feelings with me in the wrong way.
I'm sorry but I don't WANT my husband suggesting to me how to avoid things in the future...at least not in a parent type role towards me. Many times I'm well aware of the problem, and I'm doing my very best to deal with it. Letting me know how to prevent things in the future says to me that he does not believe I am capable. When he comes at me from that point of view, I am not interested in his unwanted advice. If he came at me with, "honey, how would you feel if we started doing ..." or "I see you couldn't get to such and such today...is there some way I can help?". Those types of statements make me feel like we are a team and that he is a FRIEND to me. If you notice in my post, he didn't offer suggestions to help. He just informed me that procrastination had caught up with me ( we are talking a couple of weeks of painting, etc....not months) Teaching me because he feels I'm incapable is not acceptable to me.
If you notice my wording I did not say that he SHOULD be careful how he says things. I am ASKING him to be careful. To me, those are light worlds apart. I don't see how that contradicts what I'm asking him to do.
I believe he's taking it that way. If he's saying he cannot express himself, then I think he's saying you are telling him how to speak.
But I'll play along. I didn't say you should just accept that he says, "you should" what I said was, "Things would turn out much better if you can find a way to accept that he is just he way he is."
Sure, I can rephrase the "you should" in a flowery way so it doesn't appear to be "you should." But if the underlying message is you don't think your husband is communicating with you in the right way, the conclusion he will draw is the same one I came to. You are saying he should change his approach.
Thanks for your insight. I will think longer on your post since you seem to really understand how my hubby feels. He says I contradict myself by doing the things I ask him not to do. I have always asked alllllll these years to please be careful how he words things. This is not enough direction, I see, and we are planning to focus on reading Lovebusters this week. (we have been overwhelmed with a family wedding)
Thanks Enlightened_Ex.
So what you are saying is that if you ask long enough, a "you should" becomes acceptable. So all he has to do when you do something he finds annoying is to keep asking you to change your approach and that will make his "you should's" OK.
I'll leave you with one final insight.
I see you justifying your actions, but you are critical of his. Even saying you don't understand could be interpreted as something of a criticism. It comes across as if he's (or I) am so different that it's difficult or perhaps even unrealistic to understand what either of us are saying.
Since he's not here to either defend himself or change his behavior, it's really of little value to focus on what you perceive to be his faults.
What are you going to do?
If your response is more justification, then I will simply bow out of the conversation and let you continue down your path.
I have an idea, how about you read your post to me and highlight your DJ's. I'll give you a hint, using the words "I feel" don't change a DJ into a feeling statement. One cannot say, "I feel you don't love me" and expect that to be treated as a feeling statement. It's not, it's a DJ. It's suggesting you know more about how he loves or doesn't love than he does.
So find your own DJs. After all, if you want him to stop, you can't be flinging DJs or any other love busters at him.
You may find it more productive to entice your husband on board by demonstrating the program. What you write comes across as, "I hope Marriage Builders will fix my husband."
Instead of trying to get him to read it and buy in, which doesn't seem very fruitful so far, why not use it to address your own behaviors.
What are your love busters? What things do you do that make withdrawals from the love bank? DJs, annoying habits, what are your marital sins? What emotional needs are you not meeting for him? Have you dropped independent behavior and use the POJA to resolve issues?
If the upstairs bothers both of you, then why not use the POJA to negotiate the standard and how you will tackle the issue. I wouldn't let him in on the fact you are using a program. Just sell it as what it is, a win-win solution. It bothers you both and you believe that it's in both your best interests if you pick a solution, a means and a deadline you both enthusiastically embrace.
Instead of doing it yourself and resenting he doesn't help and instead of him resenting that it's still not done why not find a way that you both can embrace. Take what you know about him to highlight aspects that will appeal to him.
It's not about which way is better, your way or his way, it's about finding ways that engage you both and leave you both more than satisfied not only with the outcome, but with the entire process.
Sometimes you simply have to make "painting the fence" seem like the best job in the world. Sometimes you simply have to make it the best job in the world, not because it is, but because you are a great partner.
You may have to be that great partner to get him on board. I reserve the right to be wrong. However it's my belief that going first and being that great partner will be far more effective than getting him to read and get on-board.
The first method demonstrates your love for him. The second says you need to be fixed and here is what is wrong with you.
Sounds a lot like what you don't like in his approach, so why are you using a different flavor what you don't like when he does it?