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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:
EasterBreak · 24/05/2023 17:00

Do you get like it with anyone else? I was just like that and would get really irritated. I realised after separating that it was just my ex who would annoy the sugar out of me.

stayathomer · 24/05/2023 17:01

My friend used to say this about her dh, about how he always talks to her when she’s trying to post on sm or read articles. Then I went away with her for a night and she LIVES on her phone!! I feel sorry for him now!!

EasterBreak · 24/05/2023 17:02

EasterBreak · 24/05/2023 17:00

Do you get like it with anyone else? I was just like that and would get really irritated. I realised after separating that it was just my ex who would annoy the sugar out of me.

My new partner can interrupted me no problem 🙈 and I was so bad before.

Maria1982 · 24/05/2023 17:04

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 13:59

I'm genuinely curious now - to all those saying I'm horribly rude for wanting some time to myself, do you not feel you have a right to an hour or so away now and then to do what you enjoy without being interrupted?

Why do you feel like you need to be an available audience at all times no matter what you are doing?

Seems odd.

As it happens I agree with you, but I think women have been conditioned to always be available to their partners , and that our own wants /needs are not important

in fact isn’t that kind of the problem here ? You’ve explained to your partner how much his behaviour distresses you and yet he carries on. On some level he seems to think that you should always be available to him…

BogRollBOGOF · 24/05/2023 17:04

YANBU

I swear that putting headphones on suddenly makes my family loquacious. The headphones on my head is apparently not a visual cue that I'm not immediately avaliable to listen to every brain-fart rattling through their heads. If it is a discussion of consequence, that's fine.

Given that I'm not the one on TVs and tablets dominating the noise going on in the house, I fail to see how so many think it's selfish to quietly listen to something of interest or motivating while relaxing or doing useful things. Most people in a couple don't have an exclusive room to retreat to when they want quiet or concentrating time. Some jobs by their nature need doing in communal areas. Generally I put headphones on because I'm concentrating or everyone else is entertaining themselves.

OP sounds very far from the types such as gamers who are constantly absorbed into their media.

Popmaster is another time that they tend to emerge full of verbal energy too...

JustBeKindItsEasy · 24/05/2023 17:05

You seem to wear headphones a lot.
Even gardening.
Its annoying being interrupted, I agree.

However as you seem to wear them doing a lot of activities I’m not surprised you are interrupted whilst wearing them
Surely this is limiting if you’re sharing your life, what’s the saying……..it’s good to talk.

phoenixrosehere · 24/05/2023 17:07

Summertimesmile · 24/05/2023 16:55

Totally agree. I can’t imagine spending half my life with headphones in and getting annoyed at having an actual spontaneous conversation

There’s a difference though when
someone is in the middle of a task and the other person not only knows that but still sees fit to interrupt them when it is not needed.

OP is in the middle of a task, her DH could either wait til she takes a break from said task or is done completely.

Also, if she turned her phone on speaker outside, she would be fighting to hear it over the wind and road noise and would have to turn it up louder and still wouldn’t have heard him anyway.

TheYearOfSmallThings · 24/05/2023 17:07

I use earphones when out and about, but I don't use them around the house, and I wouldn't like a partner to do so frequently. It is a barrier to communication and much of the chitchat that goes on in a normal relationship doesn't pass the "Is this critically important" test, but those trivial conversations matter. Listening on a speaker is better because it doesn't exclude other people and gives them some indication whether it is a good time to speak.

phoenixrosehere · 24/05/2023 17:10

BogRollBOGOF · 24/05/2023 17:04

YANBU

I swear that putting headphones on suddenly makes my family loquacious. The headphones on my head is apparently not a visual cue that I'm not immediately avaliable to listen to every brain-fart rattling through their heads. If it is a discussion of consequence, that's fine.

Given that I'm not the one on TVs and tablets dominating the noise going on in the house, I fail to see how so many think it's selfish to quietly listen to something of interest or motivating while relaxing or doing useful things. Most people in a couple don't have an exclusive room to retreat to when they want quiet or concentrating time. Some jobs by their nature need doing in communal areas. Generally I put headphones on because I'm concentrating or everyone else is entertaining themselves.

OP sounds very far from the types such as gamers who are constantly absorbed into their media.

Popmaster is another time that they tend to emerge full of verbal energy too...

Generally I put headphones on because I'm concentrating or everyone else is entertaining themselves.

Same and to drown out the noise of sports that DH watches in the kitchen. There’s only so much sports I can take on a daily basis.

Lemonyyy · 24/05/2023 17:18

I just ignore mine if he does this to me, he is very guilty of “all the crap in my brain is infinitely interesting to everyone” so I just let him prattle on until he realises I’m not listening. Ditto if I’m doing something and he blathers at me I just walk off and continue doing it.

It’s all very well saying how would I feel if he did that to me, but the difference is I don’t do it to him in the first place! If he has headphones in I can take that to mean he doesn’t want to talk. It’s not hard!

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 17:28

I'm only in a communal area wearing headphones when I'm cooking, and generally I like to be left to it when I cook anyway.

In all other circumstances I've already taken myself off somewhere else in the house or garden. Playing my media from a portable speaker would be loud and obnoxious and compete with the tv or whatever else he's doing. I don't believe any of you would prefer your partner to wander around the house blasting an audiobook vs them listening to it through headphones.

Why on earth should I have to leave my home and go somewhere else to get a hour or so of alone time? Anyone who has a big issue with this must be the clingy type.

I think the fact it's "tech" has people up in arms. Think of it as though I'm reading a book. Would think it's perfectly fine to constantly interrupt your partner who has settled down and is trying to read a book? It's the same thing. It's rude to be so demanding of someone's time an attention.

Yes, I like to garden whilst listening to my Lord of the Rings audiobook. How ghastly I am. I shall do it in silence from now on.

OP posts:
TheYearOfSmallThings · 24/05/2023 17:35

Yes, I like to garden whilst listening to my Lord of the Rings audiobook. How ghastly I am. I shall do it in silence from now on.

Flounce flounce flounce, huff huff huff.

JaneFondue · 24/05/2023 17:38

This thread has made me want to get a Lord of The Rings audiobook for myself.

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 17:39

TonTonMacoute · 24/05/2023 16:34

Agree.

Social interaction seems to be a dying art. I never listen stuff through my earphones when I'm in company (unless I wake up in the middle of the night), I think it's rude - but then I am very old.

That's the thing though ...I'm not in company. I'm in a closed bathroom, outside hanging washing, off in the garden whilst he's inside doing his own thing. He comes and finds me to tell me something that could have waited (for example about his high score in his video game....) He knows I'm listening to my book, he isn't unaware my headphones are in.

OP posts:
YoucancallmeKAREN · 24/05/2023 17:39

Tiddlypomtiddlypom · 24/05/2023 16:03

Just ignore him. You clearly have earbuds in. Just shrug and point at them if you want, then turn away and ignore him. He’ll lean. He clearly thinks he’s more important than you.

If a woman came on here saying my Husband ignores me and won't take his earbuds out when i try to talk to him there would be outrage, hundreds of women saying LTB but because a woman ignores her husband it is ok !

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 24/05/2023 17:43

I think the fact it's "tech" has people up in arms. Think of it as though I'm reading a book. Would think it's perfectly fine to constantly interrupt your partner who has settled down and is trying to read a book? It's the same thing. It's rude to be so demanding of someone's time an attention.

Actually, if someone wanted to sit and read a book in total silence, I would expect them to take themselves off somewhere private to do so, not sit in the same room as (for example) the television, or in the garden with their partner.

If you're going to sit in a communal space that you share with your family or your partner, you can't expect total uninterrupted silence.

usernother · 24/05/2023 17:46

Mine does this. I just avoid any eye contact and ignore him.

Hadjab · 24/05/2023 17:53

Why don't you connect your phone to a Bluetooth speaker, and listen that way? If you have an iPhone, you can enable Siri to obey voice commands, such as "Siri, pause."

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 18:08

Hadjab · 24/05/2023 17:53

Why don't you connect your phone to a Bluetooth speaker, and listen that way? If you have an iPhone, you can enable Siri to obey voice commands, such as "Siri, pause."

I don't want to pause, I want to be left alone for a little while unless it's an emergency.

Also I'm not in the same space as him. We have a large garden and I'm not near him, and he's usually inside and comes to find me to interrupt me when he gets bored.

He also often has headphones in by the way, much more than I do. When he's listening to something I leave him alone unless it's urgent (and it seldom is). It's not that hard to give someone some space. You all sound suffocating.

OP posts:
MeinKraft · 24/05/2023 18:14

JaneFondue · 24/05/2023 17:38

This thread has made me want to get a Lord of The Rings audiobook for myself.

Will you be allowed to listen to it without constant interruptions though

Whisper23 · 24/05/2023 18:17

I think you're getting some harsh replies here OP. Many just don't understand how important quiet/alone time is for some people.

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 18:25

JaneFondue · 24/05/2023 17:38

This thread has made me want to get a Lord of The Rings audiobook for myself.

The version narrated by Andy Serkis is fantastic!

OP posts:
coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 24/05/2023 18:28

Whisper23 · 24/05/2023 18:17

I think you're getting some harsh replies here OP. Many just don't understand how important quiet/alone time is for some people.

We do, we just don't expect to have that time in the communal areas of the house we share with other people.

I need a good chunk of alone time everyday but I would never take over the communal space and get huffy because my partner wanted to speak to me there. I go to the bedroom, out with the dog or specifically tell DH in advance that I want to watch X or read Y and could he leave me in peace.

Gastromancy · 24/05/2023 18:31

coffeecupsandwaxmelts · 24/05/2023 18:28

We do, we just don't expect to have that time in the communal areas of the house we share with other people.

I need a good chunk of alone time everyday but I would never take over the communal space and get huffy because my partner wanted to speak to me there. I go to the bedroom, out with the dog or specifically tell DH in advance that I want to watch X or read Y and could he leave me in peace.

You're imagining that I take over communal spaces, though. I don't at all.

OP posts:
amylou8 · 24/05/2023 18:50

My partners hearing is going, he's in complete denial that he's not only old but half deaf. Thing is I end up in the same situation as your DH. It really disrupts the normal flow of being in a relationship when half of it is in their own little bubble and you can't just have a chat. I'm not saying don't listen to your headphones at all, but if you're constantly shutting yourself off from him and the rest of the world I can understand why he'd find that difficult.

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