. . . but I think I am ready to take a step forward and see if I can help ease some of his abandonment feelings, by leading with my feelings. Ie. I miss him when he is at his place, I tell him or I ask if he wants to meet to go for a walk, etc.
Hi,
It's great you feel that way. I guess my tip would be to express those feelings when your man is in a better place--when he's not fighting, antagonizing or insulting you. I think what I would do is try to put a positive spin on things--"I'm so glad to see you today, I enjoy being with you and sharing dinner together with the kids . . ." In other words, make it less about your sadness when he's absent/down (because he might feed off of that, try to "one up" you or feel blamed), and make it more about love and togetherness. Anyway that's my general approach. I don't think my man would want to hear about any negative feelings I have because he thinks that's complaining or blaming. When he hears complaints from me, I think he internalizes them too much and starts to take on those negative emotions, which he doesn't want. He'll say this generally: "I don't want to hear about your work/struggles/problems, it's too upsetting." So I'm generally careful about not creating unnecessary negativity. Alas, sometimes it's difficult to pull him out of a funk, because he can be inflexible--he only wants to do what he wants and when he wants. If I make suggestions (dinner out / going for a walk / doing something fun), he'll generally say NO (whereas I'm the opposite, I generally say YES to doing things together, even if I don't love the actual thing we're doing). But I've learned to make invitations this way: "I'm going for a walk and you're welcome to join me if you like, but no pressure." That way he feels "included" even when he declines, which is 99% of the time.



I have posted mainly on the “bettering a relationship” board, but the relationship continues to deteriorate. It feels like the ship is sinking, and I’m filled with anxiety, fear, sadness, regret, and shame. My uBPW wife of nearly 34 years has been steadily getting more and more dysregulated over the past 10 years since we retired. It seems as if she’s heading into a true mental health crisis, and it’s really really hard for both of us. We have two adult children, and we try to keep our marital conflict out of their lives, so they would be stunned to know what’s really going on behind closed doors. I’ve written about it elsewhere so I won’t go into detail here, but in the last couple of months, her extreme anger and rage has become apparent on almost half of the days, and even on the “good days” she always finds several opportunities to harshly criticize me for at least five or 10 minutes.