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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:
ZiriForEver · 23/05/2023 16:49

I am both sides here :)

I like listening to books and podcasts and often use headphones to do so. Moreover, it is sometimes hard for me to rest in silence, so I kind of need them (or speaker, but sometimes it is less practical and I don't want to always take the shared space over) to rest/do chores.

I like chatting with my partner and would felt sad if he wouldn't want me to. Especially if the headphones won't be visible, so I'd get to him and then be rejected.

Our middle way is we respect the catching attention first aspect, but are both able and ready to pause immediately.
In my case it means big overhead headphones with big pause button on them. They are visible, they aren't fully noise cancelling, so I can catch his voice, but it does take a second (literally a second, I can do it by little finger/ back of my hand)

And vice versa, I can wait a moment if he is in the middle of something intense (and it is visible) or wait for him to pause it, but he does pause it.

Snoken · 23/05/2023 16:49

I am your husband in this scenario. Well I am divorced now, but the last few years of our marriage I felt really lonely in the house. If he wasn't watching TV he pretty much always had his headphones on. I don't use headphones myself because I don't like constant sounds, but I do always have the radio on in the kitchen. I hated what it did to our communication. It really stopped any flow. I couldn't just tell him, oh look there's a blackbird in the garden and we couldn't laugh at funny remarks from the radio etc because by the time he had paused whatever he had listened to and rolled his eyes the moment was gone. He couldn't hear when I told him dinner was ready so I just started eating on my own and he would just eat once he realised the house smelled like food. I stopped telling him I was going out because it would mean I would first have to go and find him in the house, tap his shoulder, watch the eye roll, and then tell him. I am a little out of touch with modern technology but I hated the feeling of living with someone who was like a ghost.

JaneFondue · 23/05/2023 16:50

Beginning to feel this way @Snoken with DH and DS. There's no flow to our convos.

HurryShadow · 23/05/2023 16:52

My DH is like this. I have told him time and time again that I cannot hear him when I am drying my hair with my hairdryer. Yet every day he'll come in and start talking to me when I'm drying my hair. There are some times when my head is tilted away from him that I don't even know he's there, yet there he is, wittering on.

If I realise and stop (giving him the side eye of despair at the same time), I'll have to say "pardon", at which point he'll repeat literally the last two words of what he's just said, so I have no context whatsoever.

Then I get "all right, no need to be so snappy" when I repeat for the eleventy-billionth time "I keep telling you - I cannot hear you when I'm drying my hair. If you want me to answer you you're going to have to start all the way back from the beginning!"

Honestly... there are some days (like today when AF has just arrived) that I do think of having a new patio installed...

I do suspect my DH has undiagnosed ADHD though and he definitely has no impulse control - he interrupts other people's conversations too as he just has to say what's on his mind right there and then, even if others are talking. He has got better at this though the side eye of despair is starting to work.

Itmustbenaptime · 23/05/2023 16:59

He’s being unfair and I can see why it would feel hard for you.
When you’re in the house, could you try playing the audio through a speaker instead of headphones? Then it might be a bit more intuitively obvious to him that you’re listening, and he can listen to if he wants… he might find it difficult to talk over it so then he would have to wait until you paused it, or might babble less…?

Talipesmum · 23/05/2023 17:01

I am the same with audiobooks while doing household jobs. Always on. But a few differences.

I know that it’s antisocial and annoying for others if my default setting is “unavailable to talk” so if I’m listening while doing a job and someone comes into the room, most of the time I automatically pause the book so I can react and chat in a fellow-human type way. I don’t have to faff with my phone for this - if I pinch my AirPod, it pauses, or if I take one out, it pauses. So I can do it instantly even with muddy hands (pinching - it’s easy to wipe them down).

On the other hand my family do know I often listen so they tend to alert me or check, and they don’t mind if I missed what they said - I’ll just pause as soon as I can, turn to them and ask them to repeat from the beginning. They don’t mind, we all try to adjust for each other. Same with kids faffing on phones or staring into space. We’re always having to alert each other and repeat ourselves - dozy family! But we don’t mind or get upset.

So my recommendation- get some headphones where you can really quickly pause without having to get to your phone. It’s transformative. Be ready to pause when your DH comes into view - it’s antisocial to be always in another world especially if he likes to chat - but equally he needs to not be cross at needing to repeat himself and to give you space.

NotReallyBotheredByThis · 23/05/2023 17:05

My OH wears hers a lot too. I have learned to stand by her quietly, like an attentive waiter until she notices & stops listening to her podcast. 😏

If I'm reading I've asked her to just put it on speaker so I can ask something without the whole unspontaneous rigmarole, otherwise I may as well sit on my own! 😋

Icannoteven · 23/05/2023 17:06

Ooooh, YANBU.

I’ve had this exact argument with my partner and kids. Everyone knows that if I am in the kitchen or doing any big cleaning tasks then I will be listening to music/ podcasts - yet they still interrupt 1000 times to tell me the most trivial, pointless shit. It drives me mad.

Its even worse if you are reading a book!

It seems the more indisposed I am, the more everyone wants my attention because the same thing happens when I am on the toilet, on the phone or running out the door. Suddenly, everyone wants to unload their thoughts on me.

I sympathise!

Have you tried just ignoring him? I tried that with my kids and it turns out that they didn’t necessarily need me to listen or answer, they are quite oblivious to just chunder on there in the background while I carry on completely oblivious with the volume up to max - they are really just trying to think out loud rather than have a conversation. Possibly your husband is the same?

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 23/05/2023 17:07

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.

Why is it okay for you to interrupt him on his phone, but it's not okay for him to interrupt you listening to a book or a podcast?

Begonne · 23/05/2023 17:13

I’m seeing both sides tbh.

I find interruptions dysregulating. I cannot do menial tasks if I’m not half distracted and in flow. That’s just how I’m wired.

However, it doesn’t make for a great fit with intimate relationships or children, so I have to compromise. What I do is organise uninterrupted periods to tackle those tasks (and let the house go to shit when we’re all home together)

I’m am also the interrupter so we have an arrangement that when his office/den door is closed, he’s off limits. I leave post it notes on the outside.

I’d take issue with his “can’t be expected” get-out-of-jail-free attitude. ND is the explanation of why something is harder, not the excuse for not trying to reach an equitable compromise.

Is there such a thing as neurodivergent informed marriage counselling?
(I think we might need it too)

SnowyPetals · 23/05/2023 17:13

It's not really fair to shut yourself off from general conversation round the home, especially if you do it a lot. That makes conversation entirely on your terms. It's a two way street and I would find your behaviour really irritating.

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:30

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines. Previously banned poster.

No, like half an hour while I'm cooking dinner on weekdays and maybe an hour or two on weekends. Hardly an addiction.

OP posts:
Sirloinwithlove · 23/05/2023 17:40

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines. Previously banned poster.

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:41

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 23/05/2023 17:07

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.

Why is it okay for you to interrupt him on his phone, but it's not okay for him to interrupt you listening to a book or a podcast?

Because he was playing a mobile game and is able to talk while he does so (and he talks while doing so all the time, in case you're looking for a gotcha).

OP posts:
Shoxfordian · 23/05/2023 17:41

It’s pretty antisocial to be wearing headphones around the house tbh; I wouldn’t like that from my partner

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:42

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines. Previously banned poster.

How is it odd? That's what I'm doing during the hour or two on the weekends....

OP posts:
Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:47

Let me clarify for those who have imagined I'm wearing my headphones 24/7. I'm only on them when doing chores around the house that I'd otherwise be doing in silence, and when I'm gardening on the weekends. I'm freely available for chitchat 90% of the time.

Also, my partner spends hours locked away playing videogames hollering into his headset. It feels to me like he's allowed to withdraw and disappear for hours, but the minute I start listening to an audiobook he appears to chatter at me. It feels like I'm not allowed my own time away to do what I want in peace and quiet without interruption. I also don't think anyone should be expected to be on-demand entertainment for their partner, we all deserve time for our hobbies, no?

OP posts:
Sirzy · 23/05/2023 17:48

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:41

Because he was playing a mobile game and is able to talk while he does so (and he talks while doing so all the time, in case you're looking for a gotcha).

But he should no more be at your beck and call than he should yours. There is some double standards going on

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:48

Sirzy · 23/05/2023 17:48

But he should no more be at your beck and call than he should yours. There is some double standards going on

Oh, hardly. Come off it.

OP posts:
Beachcomber · 23/05/2023 17:51

Of course it's annoying and unsociable if a person has headphones on a lot, especially if there is social interaction going on intermittently.

But that's different to me listening to a podcast whilst cleaning the fridge when every other member of the household is in another room going about their business.

I don't want to clean the fridge on my own in silence just in case someone pops into the kitchen to ask me where their bag / phone charger is / tell me they've just seen a bird in the garden.

I'm cleaning. It's boring. I do more than my fair share of housework. I don't think I also have to be on standby for my DH to tell me the lawnmower started first time.

Dente · 23/05/2023 17:53

I mean you are saying you are neurodivergent so interruptions distress you VS he has no impulse control because he has ADHD.

Neither of your needs trump the other and you still have responsibility for your own behaviour. If a crime was committed this wouldn’t be a reasonable excuse.

You either need to accept each others faults or separate.

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 23/05/2023 17:54

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:41

Because he was playing a mobile game and is able to talk while he does so (and he talks while doing so all the time, in case you're looking for a gotcha).

IMO it doesn't matter whether he regular talks while playing.

If it's okay for you to interrupt him while he plays, it should be okay for him to interrupt you while listening to podcasts, surely?

Dente · 23/05/2023 17:56

@Gastromancy

I have the solution! Buy a speaker!

Gastromancy · 23/05/2023 17:56

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 23/05/2023 17:54

IMO it doesn't matter whether he regular talks while playing.

If it's okay for you to interrupt him while he plays, it should be okay for him to interrupt you while listening to podcasts, surely?

You've clearly latched onto this, but this isn't an issue so I'm going to ignore you now. Thanks your your input, though!

OP posts:
JaneFondue · 23/05/2023 18:01

Oh he plays video games? Now I am wholly on your side! 😁

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