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Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

DH's meltdowns over his hobby

150 replies

tommeetippeeaddict · 04/05/2015 08:52

DH has a hobby. Don't really want to say what it is as friends and family know this issue well and all the phrases DH and I use connected to it, so let's just say it's a sport, and he plays it semi-professionally and he is looking to do it full time professionally. So much so that he has given up part of his real life job time to practice to get better at it.

It takes up most of his evenings after work for hours and hours as well as his days off. I'd say we have one day a week where we are "sport free." DH spends most of his time preoccupied with his performance at the sport and is constantly studying adjusting his diet and his sleep patterns to maximise his performance. He dreams about it and it's his main topic of conversation with anyone he meets (yawn).

Tolerable, so far, for me. I find it annoying but it's not a deal breaker for me that my DH is geekily so preoccupied with something... however, and this is where the logical jump for me takes a nosedive, it has got to the point where most topics of conversation are banned because he feels they affect his performance negatively.

I'll try and explain it better..

I can't say as he's going off to do said sport "oh I'll miss you today," or "what time will you be back?" or "can you come home a bit earlier today?" or while he's there "I've had a shit day, can't wait to see you" or simply "miss you." And all variants. He says that anything I say that may provoke any glimmer of guilt in him will affect his performance negatively and that it is my fault if he fails.

We haven't had sex for three months due to how busy he is after work and at weekends with the sport. This morning at 8am the conversation went like this:

Him: "I will go to play sport from 2pm today."
Me: "Oh okay. Will you be back late? I'd really like to have sex with you as I'm quite horny!"

He then has a total and utter meltdown. "I've told you hundreds of times not to have a guilt inducing conversation with me before I go. But you do it every time. You are sadistic. It makes me lose. You want me to fail. You want me to fail at everything I do."

This is not normal, is it?

Cue lots of huffing and puffing and wringing of hands, storming off and then coming back to accuse me of trying to ruin his life. He says I have taken away his appetite, he can't eat or sleep. I have ruined everything. He goes to bed in the dark in the middle of the day and cries in frustration. I repeat over and over again "I just asked a question!"

He's right that he has "told me so many times" the kind of thing that puts him off before he goes and the "rules" I have to stick to, to prevent him from having an epic little boy meltdown. But of course I am not going to monitor my genuine questions and reactions (often practical ones, so I can make dinner or deal with the DC or organise our lives.)

What do you think is going on here? I have, for a long time, thought he has some aspergers qualities. Would this explain anything? I fail to see the logic in his rules because he seems to have the equivalent of a mini nervous breakdown any time anything happens outside the bounds of his "planned" activity and the "rules" of that activity. And it's not just me. He does it with friends and strangers too. Anyone he feels is getting in the way of how he's planned to do something.

But he interprets my failing to see the logic as me being completely against him and trying to ruin his life. Sometimes I go along with the "rules" but then I think this is ridiculous and decide I am free to ask him anything I want. Cue epic meltdowns again.

OP posts:
CinnabarRed · 04/05/2015 08:58

Quite honestly, it's pathetic.

Given how much you're already on your own, I would in all seriousness pack his bags and tell him he wasn't welcome until he learns to grow up.

Fairylea · 04/05/2015 08:58

He sounds unhinged. And a controlling arse.

There is no way I could put up with this. To be fair I hate all sport and someone who had any interest in it at all wouldn't even get to a second date but that's because my first husband was much like yours now - sport obsessed and it drove me bananas.

(You are probably going to get slated for using the term "meltdown" on here by the way in a non autistic way but I'm the mum of a child with autism and I understand exactly what you meant by the term in this context).

EhricLovesTheBhrothers · 04/05/2015 09:01

How is this a marriage and a life?

wishingchair · 04/05/2015 09:03

Not acceptable at all. Sounds like he's probably not actually good enough to go pro and/or the pressure of trying is getting to him. Trouble is, it doesn't matter how well you follow his 'rules, if he fails it will be your fault.

You need to decide if you're ok with that. Not sure I would be.

Icimoi · 04/05/2015 09:04

This level of obsession is seriously unhealthy. Does he not realise that other people taking part in this sport don't behave like this? I don't know how you can do it, but it seems to me that he needs psychiatric help because he is putting this hobby above not only his relationship with you but, apparently, relationships with his wider family, friends and work colleagues. He is going the right way about ruining his life and he needs help to see that.

PacificDogwood · 04/05/2015 09:04

He knows he is being unreasonable and is charging ahead in to an attack to wrong-foot you.

You cannot control his behaviour, only your response to it.

Guiltypleasures001 · 04/05/2015 09:05

His hobby or sport has become an obsession and he's turning in to a zealot about it. Any kind of failure at this in this mind will be your fault.

He's bordering on mental illness if he is interpreting your perfectly natural questions as almost superstitious, ie what time are you back, do you want chops for dinner, as the equivalent of walking under a ladder.

If this cycle isn't broken soon and brought to his attention, then you can kiss your relationship good bye or rather he can.
Stop putting up with all the rules he has put in place and start setting some boundaries.

SanityClause · 04/05/2015 09:05

Is his ability in the sport really so fragile that it can't take the odd off-putting comment from you? How perfect does his life have to be for him to succeed? If this is the basis of his ability to participate in this sport professionally, I would say he hasn't got what it takes.

To be honest, though, it all sounds like emotional abuse. The constant shifting of "the rules" to keep you guessing how you should be acting. And no, it's not normal. A grownup takes responsibility for their own life.

Thistledew · 04/05/2015 09:05

Two solutions:

He lives alone so he can prioritise his sport in they way he wants without having to behave like a decent human being around anyone else.

He goes to see a sports psychologist who will tell him he needs to get a grip and find a way of dealing with the real world without behaving like a baby.

In your shoes, I would tell him that if he doesn't do the latter pdq then he can do the former.

saintlyjimjams · 04/05/2015 09:06

Well it sounds intolerable. Is he onsessive in other areas of his life? It might be anxiety/OCD rather than Asperger's. To my mind it doesn't really matter - whether he has something than can be diagnosed or is just a selfish arse you can't carry on like this.

Is there some time available where you could sit down & discuss it sensibly? Does the sport have a 'season' or is it year round?

AlternativeTentacles · 04/05/2015 09:07

Good grief. How can you have a life outside of the hobby with this level of control? No way to live. And if he fails to go pro, it will all be your fault of course. Forever!

Headdesk · 04/05/2015 09:07

Does the sport involve steroids of any kinds? Because my friend used to take steroids for his sport (even though everyone told him not to) and he used to have the most awful mood swings, the smallest thing used to set him off.

VanitasVanitatum · 04/05/2015 09:08

Failing and looking for a reason to blame it on you. Sounds like he is beyond reason on the issue, do you think you can live like this indefinitely?

sandgrown · 04/05/2015 09:08

Does he take steroids ? I have heard they can cause unreasonable behaviour and affect sexual performance

AlpacaMyBags · 04/05/2015 09:09

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

qazxc · 04/05/2015 09:10

That level of obsession and wanting to control every aspect of your environment is not normal. I think he needs to go to the doctors to talk about it.

PacificDogwood · 04/05/2015 09:10

Yes, I was wondering about steroids too tbh.

The whole thing sounds very unhealthy.

NewTwenty · 04/05/2015 09:11

If he is flying in a bird-man suit then I can understand him being worried about things affecting his performance. Anything lower-risk and he really needs to get some perspective!

TopOfTheCliff · 04/05/2015 09:12

I live with a man who practises his hobby every day with a Y in it. He has taken early retirement so he can spend more time doing it, and he earns a small living from a business associated with the hobby. But he would never be such a prima donna about it, makes time for me and the DC while grumbling if he misses a big (any) event, and understands that I need time for my own hobbies too. Your DH is using his "performance" as an excuse to be selfish and wants to avoid all criticism and normal expectation on him as a husband and father.
I think you should call him on this. Has he always believed his is too special to pull his weight in the family or is this new? Does he uses manipulative behaviour in other areas of life too? Do his family behave like this?

You have my sympathy OP I suspect they have the same hobby.

Bearsinmotion · 04/05/2015 09:12

DP can behave a bit like this - he has OCD and there are certain triggers that make him act like this. he does acknowledge that is what is happening and that I'll tolerate it up to a point. I do think it sounds like some kind of MH condition...

Quitelikely · 04/05/2015 09:12

Intolerable. Bordering on needing mental health intervention.

Show him this thread (before he goes to play his sport) Grin

Does he make a living from it?

FenellaFellorick · 04/05/2015 09:12

Something seriously wrong with him. This level of obsession over something is not healthy.

Nerris · 04/05/2015 09:12

Oh dear. This is a fast way to ruin a marriage. See if he can fit marriage counselling into his schedule, as this rate you will both need it.
He is being utterly, utterly unreasonable, but you already knew that. Sorry OP, I hope he sees what an arse he's being before its too late.

DisgraceToTheYChromosome · 04/05/2015 09:13

A South African athlete springs to mind. He wasn't as good as he thought he was either. That didn't end well.

Christinayangstwistedsister · 04/05/2015 09:14

Steroids and a selfish twat

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