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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH ignoring me when I speak

88 replies

ThatFunRubyHelper · 13/01/2025 22:16

I notice that DH does this every so often and it’s so annoying.

Tonight we were on the sofa. He was on his phone texting. We are planning on moving house and I asked him about a house we are going to view, and what he thinks of it. He ignored me, completely focused on his texting. I asked again and he keeps ignoring me texting on his phone.

I have left the room without saying anything and I can hear him talking and laughing with a friend.

It’s so annoying, how can I get him to stop?

OP posts:
MsReacher2025 · 14/01/2025 18:00

My son does this - I suddenly realise he's been talking.... and that I was supposed to respond. Sometimes I don't hear at all. He does it when I'm working, online, watching tv, texting friends.... the assumption is that I'm just there... and I'll tune into him. It drives me mad. I'm trying to teach him that if I'm doing something he needs to respect that and that being in the same room doesn't mean we can't each have our "privacy". He's getting better. There's plenty of time to chat but just barging in when I'm otherwise engaged is never going to work!

Mandylovescandy · 14/01/2025 18:01

PietariKontio · 13/01/2025 23:56

I’m kind of split on this, on one hand ignoring each other is rude, on the other hand everyone should be able to be engrossed in something, however banal or unimportant, without another person demanding that their priority at the time should come first and the other should immediately stop what they’re doing.
i guess it depends on how often it happens and whether they respect your right to not be interrupted when you’re ‘busy’.
i agree with the person who said that life should be easy, but that also means being able to be lost in our own heads at time

Edited

I am with this. My DP probably thinks I ignore him and I think that he has no respect for my time and expects me drop everything to listen to him whereas if he is busy it's fine for him to finish stuff off. So I think it depends a bit on how often and what he is doing when he ignores you

RawBloomers · 14/01/2025 18:09

I don’t think it’s rude to be so engrossed in something you don’t realise you’re being spoken to in your own home. It would be rude if, having got his attention, he then dismisses or ignores you.

If DH is engrossed in something and I want to talk to him I normally lay a hand on his leg/arm/shoulder which gets him to look up. He then (normally) stops what he’s doing and pays attention to me or (occasionally) says something like “Give me a minute” so he can finish whatever he’s in the middle of. I treat him similarly.

I wouldn’t want to live with someone who expected me to always be on alert for them using my name. That sounds pretty demanding. You wouldn’t be able to fully concentrate on anything (other than them!).

Kindling1970 · 14/01/2025 18:49

My partner hyper focuses. When he is doing something it’s like the rest of the world dims. I used to take it really personally when he ignored me but realised he isn’t being rude or dismissive, he literally doesn’t hear me. I now talk to him when he is free of distractions.

WhatNoRaisins · 14/01/2025 18:53

I grew up in a house where we just spoke to each other so it's normal for me. I would struggle to live with people who didn't respond to me, I'd probably just wait for them to approach me first.

BubblePerm · 14/01/2025 19:22

Ignore him when he speaks to you and when he asks, tell him why. Repeat as many times as necessary.

Basketballhoop · 14/01/2025 19:32

BubblePerm · 14/01/2025 19:22

Ignore him when he speaks to you and when he asks, tell him why. Repeat as many times as necessary.

Yes, absolutely. Passive aggressive escalation of a habit that annoys is the perfect way to ensure relationship harmony. 🤦‍♀️

How about talking about it as adults when neither person is engrossed in something else?

AllTooWellTV · 14/01/2025 19:33

I have a female friend like this - when she’s on her phone she just can’t hear me. I found it rude but now I am just use to it and talk to her when she isn’t mid task.

JHound · 14/01/2025 23:04

Monkeybutt1 · 14/01/2025 16:36

So you think no matter what he is doing he should drop it when the op speaks? That's ridiculous. If I am texting and DH starts a conversation I'll say give me a sec I'm just replying DH wouldn't even hear me, he's not ignoring me but when he is engrossed he tends to zone in on that one thing. I know to either wait until he's finished unless it's urgent. If it is then I will say his name to get his attention. I think demanding someone drop what they are doing because you want to have a non urgent chat is entitled.

Read the post I was responding to.

OooPourUsACupLove · 14/01/2025 23:05

I'm like this. Complete hyper focus. It's probably the number one thing that DH would change about me, it really upsets him. I've got better over time because I know it hurts him but it's always an effort, and he's got better at understanding that sometimes I need to allow the focus to flow or I get very stressed.

It's actually mentally painful to me to get interrupted. The best way I can describe it is that my thoughts are like elastic, and if I let go of them without anchoring them they ping back and I can't find them again, and that's horrible because I know I've forgotten something unfinished and I'm scared that I forgot something important. I also don't feel like I consciously direct my thinking, I just sort of suggest to myself that I want to think about a certain thing and then (hopefully) my brain goes off and I kind of observe it doing its thing. (And sometimes it just doesn't, it heads off to think about something totally not urgent and not what I want to focus on).

So if I'm interupted in a task it's really hard for me to just go back to pick it up again from where I was, I have to consciously keep remembering where I was mentally when I stopped (which means I'm not really concentrating on whatever interupted me), and if I don't do that I'll almost certainly wander off to something different instead. DH calls me Sidequest.

I end up working late every day because I want to hold that flow for as long as I can, because I know it'll take me most of the working day to pick it back up again. And then I work late again...

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 14/01/2025 23:20

Isittimeformynapyet · 14/01/2025 01:07

I can't text and talk either, but I always acknowledge someone talking to me and say "hang on a sec. I'll just send this and I'm all yours". Seems to work. I'm female.

Yes I’m similar.

Sometimes I’m trying to write a text that needs a bit of careful wording and the kids start talking to me. I do ask them to wait until I’ve finished as I can’t do both at once and I was already writing the text when they started.

Londonmummy66 · 14/01/2025 23:21

Come in scoffing the llast of the chocolate biscuits etc etc. You can guarantee he'll complain that there are none left and then say you'd asked him if he wanted any and been ignored so assumed the answer was no.....

GertrudePerkinsPaperyThing · 14/01/2025 23:22

OooPourUsACupLove · 14/01/2025 23:05

I'm like this. Complete hyper focus. It's probably the number one thing that DH would change about me, it really upsets him. I've got better over time because I know it hurts him but it's always an effort, and he's got better at understanding that sometimes I need to allow the focus to flow or I get very stressed.

It's actually mentally painful to me to get interrupted. The best way I can describe it is that my thoughts are like elastic, and if I let go of them without anchoring them they ping back and I can't find them again, and that's horrible because I know I've forgotten something unfinished and I'm scared that I forgot something important. I also don't feel like I consciously direct my thinking, I just sort of suggest to myself that I want to think about a certain thing and then (hopefully) my brain goes off and I kind of observe it doing its thing. (And sometimes it just doesn't, it heads off to think about something totally not urgent and not what I want to focus on).

So if I'm interupted in a task it's really hard for me to just go back to pick it up again from where I was, I have to consciously keep remembering where I was mentally when I stopped (which means I'm not really concentrating on whatever interupted me), and if I don't do that I'll almost certainly wander off to something different instead. DH calls me Sidequest.

I end up working late every day because I want to hold that flow for as long as I can, because I know it'll take me most of the working day to pick it back up again. And then I work late again...

Are you me? I often feel like I’ve just got into the flow of the day and getting something done, when it’s time to stop!

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