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Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH mopes because he says I get angry every time he expresses a feeling...

390 replies

MossLover · 23/04/2025 22:10

This might be more of a vent/detailing of events so I don't forget what happened.

So, hear me out. I tend to feel other people's emotions (like an energy or force) even if they're not directly expressing them, especially the negative ones. I'm particularly in tune with DH's; when he's anxious or upset or angry it hits me like a ton of bricks, and I feel like I can't escape it.

This morning we had our plumber, electrician, and dog poop scooper coming to perform their respective services. DH was getting ready for work when I felt anger and upset coming off of him, so I asked him what's wrong. He said every time I ask him to express his feelings I get mad at him (which, I have been trying to be conscious of and not do), but he explained himself anyway: He feels embarrassed of the state of the house when we have other people inside it because he worries it'll hurt his professional reputation (which I think is completely unreasonable because these are not people who are ever going to be hiring him or like, reporting back to his clients about the state of our house.)

I didn't immediately get angry, but I did ask him why he didn't let me know he felt this way, say, yesterday, instead of the exact time that the workers were due to arrive, and how he can be angry with me for not doing something he didn't ask me to do. He replied that he's expressed this to me in the past, and added some stupid quip about "the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results--" and that's what first got me irritated because I don't remember him saying that to me ever, and I said as much.

He then said, "There you go getting angry again, and now you're gonna accuse me of gaslighting you," (which I didn't and wasn't going to do, and didn't think it was fair of him to say that) and I told him sometimes he thinks he says things aloud but really only thinks them, and vice versa (which genuinely seems like a recurring problem; and then he accused me of gaslighting him. (I was gaslit and emotionally abused all through my childhood; I would NEVER do that to someone else.) Naturally this upset me further.

And like, yeah, the kitchen was kind of trashed from Easter and from everyday existence with a toddler, NGL. But I had just gotten back from a week away at military course, and he had complained to me that the garden looked like shit, so I spent the last couple days mowing and pruning and weeding it instead of cleaning indoors. It felt like a priority because we share a driveway with the neighbors. I told him this, and asked him, if I had cleaned indoors instead of out, if he would have been equally embarrassed of the garden as he is of the kitchen. He said no, because he had hired a landscaper (who's not due to even assess the property til Thursday... Also, we've hired a housekeeper too, who also hasn't come yet, so this didn't make a bit of sense to me.) He also added that the house would be a lot cleaner if I just "cleaned as I went."

I told him he was being ridiculous, and he thought I called him a dick, and said "There you go calling me names again," (which I am guilty of doing when we have particularly bad arguments, but I hadn't that time.) and he reiterated this is why he doesn't share his feelings with me and mopes about it instead. I said that if he doesn't express them, then I can't change anything, and resentment just builds up. He said "Well you seem pretty resentful now," which was incredibly frustrating in and of itself.

He went away to finish getting ready and I left my breakfast at the table to try to squeeze in some last-minute cleaning, and while I was doing it I realized that the majority of the stuff lying around and the majority of the dishes in the sink were things that he had used to cook on Easter. And to give him credit, he did cook four different meals for 6 people, and cleaned up after 3 of them (I would have helped but I was cleaning the rest of the house and trying to get the bedding laundered and set up for our guests), but he gave up on the last one. And I don't even mind having to do them, it's just the fact that he was essentially blaming me for the mess when I didn't even do it that really pissed me off.

I went back to him with the intent to ask him why he didn't "clean as he went," and expected him to say "it got late/I got tired/I wanted to spend time with family on the holiday, etc.," so that I could say to him "If it's so easy to clean as you go, why didn't you just do it? If those things excuse you from leaving a mess, why don't they apply to me?"

But what he said was that he cooked and cleaned up all day long and he "thought someone else should take a turn," (he never asked me to clean up, btw) and that I was "comparing apples to oranges" because it was a holiday and he had done an exceptional amount of cooking all day... As if I don't also cook multiple meals and clean up afterwards every other regular day. And he got caught up on thinking I was mad at him for leaving dishes instead of my actual argument. He just wasn't getting it, probably, I think, because he didn't want to get it. I told him if he ever tells me "just clean as you go" again, we are finished.

Then I went back to cleaning and getting the workers to the appropriate rooms, and as he was leaving he asked me if I wanted to hug it out (because he KNOWS I can't hold grudges very long and that if he just waits long enough I'll be too tired of being angry to actually resolve anything) and then I called him a bunch of names because I was literally seething at that point. Naturally he goes, "Oh, yep! There's the name calling again," and leaves for work.

And like, the worst part is, I don't feel mad anymore about it (like I said, I can't hold a grudge to save my life) but I feel like if I don't act angry and cold for a day or three, he won't take the issue seriously. Like he has to feel like he might really lose me if he doesn't admit to being in the wrong, and then there's room for doubt that he's just apologizing without really meaning it.

I don't know what to do. Couples counseling, maybe ?

OP posts:
nobodywantsit · 24/04/2025 06:07

MossLover · 24/04/2025 05:46

@BabyOrca I’m in the military reserves, and I walk them sometimes. But like I said… they have space and opportunity to exercise. They’re out running around, sunbathing, barking at animals, or chasing each other all the time.

I’m still confused as to what you’re getting at

They still need walking daily. They like the new smells and a different place. It’s not just about physical activity, it’s mental stimulation too.

BabyOrca · 24/04/2025 06:09

Is military reserves a job or more like a volunteering gig?

VeterinaryCareAssistant · 24/04/2025 06:11

Wardrobehanger · 23/04/2025 22:17

Sorry i didn’t get further than ‘you have a dog poop scooper’?!

Same!

You really pay someone to pick up dog poo? Why not just pick it up yourself?

VeterinaryCareAssistant · 24/04/2025 06:17

MossLover · 24/04/2025 00:49

They haven't started yet. And again, I was away all of last week, it's spring time so everything is growing like mad and it took up almost all of my time the last few days to get the garden under control, and my husband cooked four 6-person meals in the kitchen and left it a wreck since Easter.

If he cooked shouldn't you wash up? And vice versa when you cook.

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:25

Enrichetta · 24/04/2025 06:05

I'm trying to get my head around your very unusual setup... Can you be more specific. What does being in military reserve entail - how many hours do you actually work, compared to your husband. How many children, how old, at school?

How do you actually organise your life - it all seems so chaotic.

As for the dog poo....... words fail me. I assume you have a separate garden for the kids/family, but still 😱

It is very chaotic!

The reserves are supposed to be one weekend a month and two weeks in the summertime, but we have been having a lot of 3+ day drills, and if you want to get promoted (you have to be, in order to be retained), you have to do a lot of individual education, physical training, volunteering, take courses to learn skills, be responsible for other service members… So it’s more hours than they advertise. My unit is a 2 hour drive from home as well.

Usually my days are some jumbled mess of squeezing in a workout, toddler care, grocery shopping, cooking, trying to get the house tidy and cleaning the dirtiest parts, a load or two of laundry, pet care (feeding, bathing, nail clipping, meds, vet appointments, dog door fixing, y’know), attending to military matters, and gardening/landscaping. On Sunday mornings I volunteer with my church, and usually get my “reading” done through listening to audio books. DD goes to school two days a week, so that helps; my two older step daughters don’t typically stay with us. Not everything gets done every day, but I’m doing my best. The housekeeper and landscapers are going to be a huge boon, especially on those occasions when I’m away.

Hubby works… many hours. Usually 2-3 nights out of the week, he doesn’t get home til after 8pm. He works very hard for us and I appreciate it immensely.

yes, the dog yard is separate from the rest of the garden.

OP posts:
TimeToMixItUp3 · 24/04/2025 06:31

Jennifershuffles · 23/04/2025 22:21

I also want to know about the dog pooper scooper.

I didn't even know this was a job, that person is a hero.

Horserider5678 · 24/04/2025 06:32

Wardrobehanger · 23/04/2025 22:17

Sorry i didn’t get further than ‘you have a dog poop scooper’?!

I thought the same! How often do they come and clean? I clean up after my dogs so soon as they’ve been otherwise the garden would be rank!

beAsensible1 · 24/04/2025 06:33

God you have communication issues.

but it also seems you listen to respond rather than listen to understand. You are communicating with him based on what you think he while say next. That’s not real communication is it?

you feeling other people’s emotions strongly is quite frankly not anyone else’s problem. Manage it yourself. Trying to push him to emote or not emote based on how it makes you feel is ridiculous and unfair (barring abusiveness obviously)

much of this will probably be solved once the housekeeper gets in. But again you both need to communicate and it feels as if he is afraid to communicate as you don’t like his emotions.

you are both in the wrong. Re communication

ive just seen you don’t work and he works till late…

TeenLifeMum · 24/04/2025 06:33

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:02

Good for you, hun. You’re a star.

He volunteered to cook all of that, and I’m pretty sure he mostly cleaned in between meals because he needed the cook ware and counter space. Generally the dishes are my responsibility, but I was busy with more pressing matters.

“good for you hun” because I manage to pick up my dogs’ poop? Yeah, you’d wind me up too if you use the same patronising tone with dh. I thought maybe you’d missed something from your op that would clarify why you are so busy you can’t do basic household tasks, but no… very odd.

moose62 · 24/04/2025 06:33

So you are basically a stay at home mum with one child at school 2 days of the week and dogs that you don't walk.
You admit that your husband works long hours so I can understand why he would be unhappy if the place was a mess. If you have time to ' squeeze in a workout' then perhaps use cleaning up as exercise. And how many times a day do you have to get the dog door fixed. Mine hasn't broken in 10 years!

TimeToMixItUp3 · 24/04/2025 06:33

Can you have a huge declutter? I got all my family over after my ex had a similar melt down about being embarrassed about the state of our house. I said to my family just bin it, don't show me, just soft it and bin it if you think it needs it. It has been so much easier to keep clean afterwards.

Unsureabouteverything · 24/04/2025 06:33

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:02

Good for you, hun. You’re a star.

He volunteered to cook all of that, and I’m pretty sure he mostly cleaned in between meals because he needed the cook ware and counter space. Generally the dishes are my responsibility, but I was busy with more pressing matters.

If this is how you speak to your DH, then no wonder he's unhappy.
I'm happy to do most of the cooking in my house, but if my DP talked about "more pressing matters" I'd go on strike and leave it all up to him.
Also, you should be checking and washing up while he's cooking if necessary.

beAsensible1 · 24/04/2025 06:34

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:25

It is very chaotic!

The reserves are supposed to be one weekend a month and two weeks in the summertime, but we have been having a lot of 3+ day drills, and if you want to get promoted (you have to be, in order to be retained), you have to do a lot of individual education, physical training, volunteering, take courses to learn skills, be responsible for other service members… So it’s more hours than they advertise. My unit is a 2 hour drive from home as well.

Usually my days are some jumbled mess of squeezing in a workout, toddler care, grocery shopping, cooking, trying to get the house tidy and cleaning the dirtiest parts, a load or two of laundry, pet care (feeding, bathing, nail clipping, meds, vet appointments, dog door fixing, y’know), attending to military matters, and gardening/landscaping. On Sunday mornings I volunteer with my church, and usually get my “reading” done through listening to audio books. DD goes to school two days a week, so that helps; my two older step daughters don’t typically stay with us. Not everything gets done every day, but I’m doing my best. The housekeeper and landscapers are going to be a huge boon, especially on those occasions when I’m away.

Hubby works… many hours. Usually 2-3 nights out of the week, he doesn’t get home til after 8pm. He works very hard for us and I appreciate it immensely.

yes, the dog yard is separate from the rest of the garden.

Ah. Well then yes if he works till 8, you should’ve cleaned up knowing trades people were coming.

couchparsnip · 24/04/2025 06:34

WeddingGuest25 · 24/04/2025 05:28

There’s a lot of sense from PPs that is worth thinking about, OP.

One thing that stood out to me is the beginning part of this argument. I was abused as a child, I’m also very sensitive to moods as a result. I have learned (through lots of therapy in my early 20s) that it isn’t my job to manage those moods on behalf of others. He’s an adult, as are you. If he’s grumpy, or whatever, he has agency to address that with you if he wants to. It sounds like you’ve developed a habit (understandably) where you’re trying to get ahead of, and manage, the problem by surfacing it. Why not try not doing that? Feel the mood internally, but don’t take action - let him address it with you if / when he wants to. You may find that the extra time that gives him allows him more time to rationalise / process and then engage you on it more constructively - rather than being bounced prematurely into stating his position and doing so clumsily as a result.

i really recommend therapy to help you recognise and understand some of your patterns of behaviour; I found it game changing.

Very good advice here.
If you feel his mood, try to let him work it out without questioning him on it. It's rarely a good idea to start an argument.
Your DH predicted you would get mad and you ended up calling him names when he wanted to hug it out. It seems like there's a pattern forming.

Therapy sounds like a good idea. You need to learn better ways of resolving conflicts because what you're both doing isn't going well. Gently, this is likely to be your issue more than your DHs - due to your difficult past.

BigHeadBertha · 24/04/2025 06:35

Definitely couples counseling. It sounds like you two can't communicate with each other at all. One of you says one little thing and you're off, chasing each other 'round and 'round the mulberry bush. I only read half of it and got too exhausted to continue. You two could have used all that energy to clean the house. Good luck with it.

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:36

TeenLifeMum · 24/04/2025 06:33

“good for you hun” because I manage to pick up my dogs’ poop? Yeah, you’d wind me up too if you use the same patronising tone with dh. I thought maybe you’d missed something from your op that would clarify why you are so busy you can’t do basic household tasks, but no… very odd.

Oh, I’m sorry; I didn’t realize this was a homemaking competition

All I do constantly is household tasks. There is always, always more to do, and he will focus only on what’s not done instead of what is… Though I finally got him to see that and he said he will work on it

OP posts:
Applesonthelawn · 24/04/2025 06:37

You both have communication issues.
He keeps things bottled up until he's at breaking point because he has learned that how you two communicate ends badly.
It sounds like you don't understand what drives his irritation, maybe you feel you are trying your best to juggle everything and you have just too much on, maybe you feel you are not responsible for his feelings (which is true).

Either way, counselling would help.

As an aside, I feel like my DH gets angry if I am upset about anything, but it's because he feels helpless with those types of problem (family members being ill etc.) which he ultimately is. I try to calm it by telling him he is not responsible and can't help, except by just offering a hug which is all I need.

TeenLifeMum · 24/04/2025 06:37

BabyOrca · 24/04/2025 06:09

Is military reserves a job or more like a volunteering gig?

You get paid - loads of my colleagues do it alongside their nhs role (they get unpaid extra time off for the training and if they get deployed). They work full time and have dc and run a household without housekeepers. I can’t decide if the op is on the wind up or just really lazy and trying to justify it.

Soontobe60 · 24/04/2025 06:38

MossLover · 24/04/2025 00:49

They haven't started yet. And again, I was away all of last week, it's spring time so everything is growing like mad and it took up almost all of my time the last few days to get the garden under control, and my husband cooked four 6-person meals in the kitchen and left it a wreck since Easter.

In my house, I generally do the cooking and DH will do the cleaning up straight after the meal. If he cooks, I clean up. I would assume you were not gardening whilst he was cooking for guests, or indeed not gardening at all when guests are present.
You sound like hard work - do you have a job out side of the home? If not, I would expect you to do the bulk of the housework.

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:39

beAsensible1 · 24/04/2025 06:34

Ah. Well then yes if he works till 8, you should’ve cleaned up knowing trades people were coming.

I cleaned up the garden because he was complaining it looked like shit earlier in the week. I figured we didn’t need to impress the plumber and electrician with a sparkling kitchen; they weren’t even working there

OP posts:
VeterinaryCareAssistant · 24/04/2025 06:40

MossLover · 24/04/2025 05:27

I’m confused as to where walking comes in here?

They have lots of space to run outdoors, whenever they want. We take them on jaunts through the woods and to swim in the creek sometimes, too.

They should still be walked everyday!

TeenLifeMum · 24/04/2025 06:40

Unsureabouteverything · 24/04/2025 06:33

If this is how you speak to your DH, then no wonder he's unhappy.
I'm happy to do most of the cooking in my house, but if my DP talked about "more pressing matters" I'd go on strike and leave it all up to him.
Also, you should be checking and washing up while he's cooking if necessary.

Quite! Glad it’s not just me reading it that way.

Doesn’t sound like you’re a team.

InWalksBarberalla · 24/04/2025 06:42

MossLover · 24/04/2025 06:36

Oh, I’m sorry; I didn’t realize this was a homemaking competition

All I do constantly is household tasks. There is always, always more to do, and he will focus only on what’s not done instead of what is… Though I finally got him to see that and he said he will work on it

But you've got one child who goes to school two days a week and a very part time job. How do you not have loads of time to do household tasks?

TheCountofMountingCrispBags · 24/04/2025 06:43

MossLover · 23/04/2025 22:26

I don't think he's doing it on purpose or to be manipulative; he gets like that for other reasons that have nothing to do with me (which always makes me anxious because I assume it's something I did). I think that's just how he feels... But I wish he would try to consider things from my perspective sometimes, and maybe rationalize himself out of those emotions, you know?

@Jennifershuffles @Screamingabdabz @Wardrobehanger Yes, we hired a dog poop scooper. We have three dogs who have access to a large fenced in yard via a dog door; it's difficult to keep up with it because I can't just scoop it as they go (I'd be out there all day long) and I have a hard enough time keeping up with the regular home maintenance + childcare.

Bloody hell, people have horses without hiring a shit cleaner.
That's the most entitled thing I have heard in donkey's years!
You'd be better to sack them and get a cleaner. But then again, 3 dogs, presumably not small if you need a jcb operative to clear up their shit, are going to make a house messy too. Are they good with the child?

I'd also be suggesting a divorce. All so very toxic and selfish, with a child in the mix

beAsensible1 · 24/04/2025 06:45

If you don’t work and still can’t pick up after your dogs then you have too many.

why are they able to trash the guest rooms and leaving mountains of poo in the garden. I can’t even imagine the stench.

no wonder he’s embarrassed