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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU for getting fed up of being interrupted when my headphones are in?

188 replies

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 15:53

Fully prepared to be told I'm being unreasonable, but this is driving me round the bend and I finally snapped a bit today. My partner has a habit of entering a room already talking to me without checking to see if he's interrupting me. I could be reading, writing, working, listening to a podcast - doesn't matter. It seriously winds me up. To be honest he talks quite a lot and doesn't always provide context for what he's talking about. It can be confusing for me and I have to ask a lot of clarifying questions and I feel like a captive audience sometimes (he'll be going on about cars, for example, when he knows I'm not that interested). For full disclosure I am neurodivergent, so it's likely that interruptions and lack of quiet time to myself cause me more distress than is the norm.

I always listen to a podcast or audiobook when I cook, clean and garden, so usually my hands are full or dirty when he interrupts me and I can't quickly pause what I'm listening to without faffing around a bit first. I've asked him many times to please catch my attention before he starts speaking, or better yet just leave me be unless it truly can't wait, because I'll have to drop what I'm doing, clean my hands etc and then find my phone to pause what I'm listening to. We have plenty of time during the day to talk so it's not like he wouldn't have another chance to say whatever it is. However, he has continued to just enter the room and start speaking without seeming to notice my irritation at being interrupted.

Today I was out in the garden sowing some seeds, headphone in, phone clear across the garden and out of reach for quick pausing. He rocked up to me and just started speaking during a climactic scene in my audiobook (The Battle of Helm's Deep in the Lord of the Rings, if you must know) so I sighed and took one earbud out and until he finished and walked off. I carried on gardening feeling miffed that I missed a bit of the book. Suddenly he's shouting up at me from the bottom of the garden, so I had to take my earbuds out again and shouted that I couldn't hear him over the wind and road noise. He kept talking and I still couldn't hear a word, so I had to get up and walk towards him to hear, and it turns out he was just saying something about airing out the shed - nothing I needed to be informed about. He then went back into the house and I was irritated at this point.

It might not seem a big deal, but when it happens every time I try to have some time to myself to listen to my book, the frustration really builds up. I approached him and explained that I felt really frustrated and distressed about being interrupted so often when we've spoken about this in the past. He didn't look up from his phone and gave a perfunctory apology. I tried to get him to discuss it with me, explaining that I find it very distressing, we have talked about it before, so I'm wondering why it keeps happening when he knows it upsets me. He says he thinks he has ADHD and can't be expected to have impulse control and not interrupt me (paraphrasing but that's the gist). I said that's not really fair and he can at least wave to get my attention so I can pause my audio. The conversation went in circles until he got angry with me and now I'm downstairs crying and he's shut up in his office in a mood.

OP posts:
Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 15:54

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Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 15:55

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Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 15:56

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Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 15:57

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NotAHouse · 23/05/2023 15:57

Some men (for the NAMALT brigade) think that whatever is coming out of their mouth is the most important thing in the world. My DH insists on talking to me about football when I've told him I'm not really interested. (Some) men don't care whether women are interested or not - that applies to a lot of things, not just conversation...

Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 15:58

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PinkFootstool · 23/05/2023 16:00

I studiously ignore people who do this. It used to happen in my old office. Those people were the reason I wore the damn headphones in the first place!!!

Damn you Julie and your constant fucking "d'ya know wot I mean" comments.

I love WFH.

neilyoungismyhero · 23/05/2023 16:00

My husband is the same. I walk the dog listening to podcasts and when I come back I like to finish listening. This seems to annoy him beyond belief. I should be available 100 percent to his needs and conversation apparently. I also have hearing issues with clarity so headphones are brilliant and I do tend to use them at home. He told me the other day that he'd been shouting at me in the doorway for 5 minutes despite being about 3 paces from me, but he couldn't talk to me with my headphones on. For my part that's a bit of a relief but that's another story. I now tell him I'm putting them on.

Jellycats4life · 23/05/2023 16:02

My children do this constantly and it irritates the shit out of me. Like you say, the having to shout “stop talking because I can’t hear you!” having to dry your hands (I listen to podcasts when I clean), find your phone and hit pause. I swear my children see me wearing headphones and it’s like a red rag to a bull, they need to interrupt me over and over.

But they’re children. Autistic ones at that, so they wouldn’t know a social cue if it slapped them around the face.

There’s no excuse for a grown adult behaving like that. Even one who thinks he might have ADHD.

OneTC · 23/05/2023 16:04

You both sound pretty intolerable tbh

gamerchick · 23/05/2023 16:07

Have you tried ignoring him? Don't take your headphones out and don't go and see what he wants when he's a distance away. Just stop.

NowZeusHasLainWithLeda · 23/05/2023 16:09

Do you wait till he's finished the chapter in his book if you want to speak to him?

If so, Yanbu.

And yes, it is the same thing.

BreviloquentBastard · 23/05/2023 16:11

My husband used to do this, drove me potty so I get you OP. I got some noise cancelling headphones and told him that if he couldn't learn to get my attention before he started talking and give me time to pause my book, he'd be talking to himself.

It only took a couple of instances of him just yammering away and me being blissfully oblivious for him to realise I wasn't joking and start sheepishly waving at me whenever I've got my headphones on.

The difference here is my husband was apologetic and wanted to stop annoying me, your husband seems to think he gets a pass for being an obnoxious arse and you should just put up with it.

kettlebellchips · 23/05/2023 16:12

It would depend how much you listen to your headphones. If you spend half your day in a bubble, then it would be annoying for your DH.

Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 16:16

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powerrangers · 23/05/2023 16:18

It depends. Are you someone who always has your headphones on/in? Because this is also very annoying. It makes it impossible to have normal flow of conversation in passing. I've noticed lots of people have headphones in constantly now and a simple remark in passing turns into a massive enterprise of the. Having to stop and you having to repeat and he's all just not easy breezy chit chat.

Beachcomber · 23/05/2023 16:19

I nearly posted a similar thread the other day!

I often listen to a podcast when I'm cooking / cleaning and usually with headphones as it's easier to move around and has the plus of not disturbing others.

DH came into the kitchen several times on Sunday and just started talking to me and I had to fumble about drying hands, pausing phone, etc.

Of course I don't listen to a podcast / wear headphones if other people are in and out constantly and we are regularly interacting but equally I don't do (hours of) cleaning / cooking in boring silence just in case someone wants to speak to me occasionally.

I'm thinking of ditching the headphones and listening on speaker.

JaneFondue · 23/05/2023 16:19

Ah I am your partner in this scenario. Because DH ALWAYS has his headphones in. So does teen DS. Makes it very hard to have a conversation about anything, even trivial stuff like " Did my parcel come today?"

mogsrus · 23/05/2023 16:22

Amazing that the addiction overtakes everything else

Newyeardietstartstomorrow · 23/05/2023 16:23

Having your earphones in whilst you are in company is a little antisocial perhaps? You didn't want to be interrupted from what you were listening to, your dh didn't want to be interrupted from what he was looking at, but it all sounds very dramatic and could easily be solved by communication.

psyonicwaves · 23/05/2023 16:26

Is this a reverse?! My partner sometimes talks to me while I'm busy on my phone or in the middle of something else, gets annoyed if I'm not immediately paying full attention to her, then refuses to repeat herself on principle. It's very frustrating. There's plenty of times when she's on her phone and I'll wait for her to finish before talking about something I want a response to. It doesn't seem like a hard thing to do.

Truth is different people have different interaction styles, but flouncing off and getting in a mood about things doesn't help anyone. With that said, it's frustrating if every time you try to talk to someone they're listening to something else - which, perhaps dramatically (or not) is probably how he feels.

If he won't discuss it with you and try to solve the problem, though, he's being an arse.

Ilikewinter · 23/05/2023 16:26

Um, sounds like hard work to me. Maybe your husband rants on with himself because you always have your headphones in? .

MeinKraft · 23/05/2023 16:29

No I don't think YANBU. Surely part of enjoying life is getting time to listen to podcasts, read books or watch TV. When my kids have gone to bed I get maybe an hour or two to do what I want and sometimes there's a series I want to watch. Well I can forget about sitting down for an hour and getting peace to watch it because DH will be constantly in and out talking about things I couldn't care less about. Like I'm clearly sitting trying to watch and listen to something and he stands there talking about the brush head on the strimmer for about ten minutes. Could've talked about it earlier in the day but saved it until I want an hour to myself. Does my fucking head in.

Whatkindofuckeryisthis · 23/05/2023 16:33

This sounds annoying.. for him! It’s weird to have to get someone’s attention before you speak at any point! Especially if he then waves, you get pissed off and having to pause something for him to just have a random chat! Fair enough if you say ‘I’m going for a garden with my headphones please leave me be’ but if this is all the time whatever you’re doing, it sounds very lonely for him!

DiIIy · 23/05/2023 16:36

I get what you mean, I get the same frustration on the rare occasion I have mine in. But I don't dream of taking it out on anyone because I know its my issue not theirs. It sounds very lonely for your partner to only speak to you when you say, what a shit relationship. (Coming from someone who feels the frustration so I do understand, but i dont think its not normal or healthy to treat people like that).