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Relationships

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

OH sulking in spare bedroom; perspective needed

88 replies

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:23

Obviously this is from my perspective only.
I have known my partner for many years and we have had a couple of attempts at being together which failed. This year we got together and have been madly in love. we have had a couple of disagreements, he calls them arguments, which to my mind seem to be me being in the wrong from his perspective, and in which he seems to recede or sulk, for want of a better word, and I capitulate.

Tonight, he cooked dinner and I asked if there were any more veg. he said there weren't and that he hadn't cooked them all in the packet.
apparently i made a face, said i liked veg more than potatoes and implied that he knew that already (or ought to).

A little later he told me he felt hurt by my response and that he had cooked a meal and it was my obligation to appreciate that.
I tried to explain I was only trying to make my needs known (in a clumsy way). and that I understood that if a way I respond to someone is not appropriate then I try and modify my reactions in future. I have a long history of not making my needs known and am in therapy. I am perhaps not assertive in the right way at the right time but I am working on this.

Anyway, after i apologised (which he did not accept as he seemed to feel I defended myself first) i pointed out that he had made remarks earlier in the evening that I found mildly offensive and he had only defended himself, not apologised. His response was that he did not agree that it was offensive. thereby denying my feelings.

silence ensued and then I just thought I am not going to be bullied into apologising by his sulking. I carried on with washing up and then sat by him in silence too. after a while I took out my journal and began to write it next to him and he then went to the spare room where he now is lying on the bed fully clothed, door open and light off, sulking.

is it irretrievable?

OP posts:
sackrifice · 31/12/2018 22:26

You wanted more veg, there wasn't any more, and he is sulking?

TougheningUp · 31/12/2018 22:28

He sounds very difficult.

He took offense at what sounds like a reasonable question. And sulking and giving you the silent treatment is abusive.

I'd cut my losses and get rid.

Thehop · 31/12/2018 22:28

This sounds like way too much hard work this early on, honestly

MadamBatty · 31/12/2018 22:28

He’s a delicate little flower. Are you able for this?

jessstan2 · 31/12/2018 22:29

You really need to live apart.
Wine

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:31

thanks for the perspective. we had previously had a conversation about the house we are planning to finish together and i was going to put money in, which is a very charged topic in terms of pride.
I'm not meaning to drip info here but stuff is coming to me as I sit downstairs and process it.

What do you think I should do tonight?

OP posts:
starfishmummy · 31/12/2018 22:32

Ltb

Oddcat · 31/12/2018 22:34

I wouldn’t put up with his childish behaviour Op . Sulking over vegetables?? Bloody ridiculous.

Bluntness100 · 31/12/2018 22:34

How is he denying your feelings by saying it wasn't offensive and it's not you denying his by saying it wasn't?

Sounds like the pair of you are hard work, arguing over veggies for dinner.

I honestly couldn't be arsed with either of you and I doubt many would.

KateGrey · 31/12/2018 22:35

From the brief information he sounds very high maintenance and defensive and possibly a little bit arrogant. My husband grew up with a single parent mother who believed the sun shone out of his backside. Any mild comment was perceived as criticism and he’d get defensive. It is better now but he can be very difficult. If I was telling my then self from my self I’d cut my losses.

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:36

Madambatty yes he is totally.
we are in my house now and he is due to leave day after tomorrow. nowhere else to go, but he easily has funds for a hotel.
I want to work it out but i don't want to capitulate.

OP posts:
JoyceDivision · 31/12/2018 22:36

Hard work,cut your losses

Oddcat · 31/12/2018 22:38

My ex was abusive and it was exhausting having to defend every bloody comment I made . I doubt very much if he will change tbh , if he can’t handle a comment about more veg how on earth is he going to handle bigger issues?

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:39

I have been in abusive relationships and even had a conversation about this with him the other day. I dont think he can see further than his own face most of the time.

OP posts:
cordeliavorkosigan · 31/12/2018 22:41

Soon you'll just give in before the sulking and get trained to have everything his way and not question or shape your own meals, afternoons, spending, time with others or whatever. this is a bad sign. Unless he can admit he does this and want to change, which doesn't seem too likely!

NettleTea · 31/12/2018 22:42

he is making an awful lot of drama about something which should be insignificant.

you asked for more veg. he hadnt cooked all of it. you told him you prefer veg to potatoes (for future reference) and then the huffing and demanding apologies for hurt feelz all starts.

seriously. life is going to get far more complicated than this. I dont think I could be bothered tbh

Oddcat · 31/12/2018 22:43

Actually, the more I think about it the bigger the red flag his sulking is . Again, my abusive ex used to take himself off to bed and sulk, saying he wanted to be left alone. I left him alone and then he had a go at me for not going to see how he was.

LaughingCow99 · 31/12/2018 22:43

If he'd pulled a face at you not making enough food, what would you have done.? He probably thinks you were being ungrateful of his effort. Maybe that is his perspective.

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:47

Thank you every one for your help
cordelia thank you for giving me a concrete example ( I've had a couple now and am struggling), If I were to put to him that he wants me to give in to his sulking and not get to eat the food that I need and like for 50% of the time he would need to accept he was manipulating me.

However, i feel that even approaching him with any proposition now is me capitulating to him. And that me not doing so is me ending the relationship

OP posts:
Dogsmellssobadbob · 31/12/2018 22:49

You both seem to be making enormous drama over a really insignificant thing

I think yours comes from being sensitive and his from being sulky and passive aggressive

If this is what happens when vegetables aren’t right then you will not cope as a couple when life really throws the shit stuff at you

End this. It isn’t right.

JiltedJohnsJulie · 31/12/2018 22:49

I think you were rude. Told him that he should know you liked veggies more than potatoes. You might have tried to be more assertive but from what you’ve said, it’s just rude.

If you’ve apologised though and he’s still sulking, i’d be seriously considering if you want to stay with him.

I agree that you both sound like incredibly hard work.

Apileofballyhoo · 31/12/2018 22:49

It shouldn't be like this, OP. It really shouldn't.

myidentitymycrisis · 31/12/2018 22:51

I really want to see it from both perspectives, but I am finding myself being skewed by the sulking. i feel I have apologised and that if I do more I am being manipulated.

OP posts:
sackrifice · 31/12/2018 22:52

How about 'I've checked travelodge and they have rooms for tonight, hows about you book yourself a room?'

Apileofballyhoo · 31/12/2018 22:52

Apologising for asking if there was more veg? Life is too short.

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