Thanks Pook, I completely agree and try very hard to lead with love with him, but I have my moments where it’s really hard to do so! I am striving to get to the point that you have gotten yourself to, leading with love, open communication, letting the “little things” roll off you, etc. I find when I am tired, that’s when I struggle really badly and really struggle to understand why he can’t see that I have been up since 4 am and out the door since 5 am and am totally exhausted and that then expecting me to make dinner, organize all of the kids things for school the next day after doing 2+ carpools is over the top…and makes me want to scream, but I just do it instead! And I want to make faces to him, but I don’t! I think one of the reasons why the face thing gets me is because it’s kit justifiable and a 2 year old thing to do! I know it comes from his “not nice” personality, his entire body changes (mostly his eyes) and I know “I need to get out of here” fast…well that’s needed to happen in the past, but it’s what goes through my head.
Everyone messes up and that's completely normal- we'll never be "perfect" and that's not the goal here. We can't have a relationship with someone mentally ill if the rules only apply one way.
For your typical day- up at 5AMnd on the run into the evening. There needs to be boundaries there, but first there needs to be honest conversations that he can relate to. When he's receptive and balanced (not unhinged, not acting manic or depressed), you need to talk to him about carrying such a heavy workload and how hard it is daily. Because honestly, he probably sees it but doesn't actually realize how busy you are.
These conversations are walking on eggshells at first, because you don't know how he'll react. It can't be about him though with something like, "I get up at 5AM and I need to cook dinner? You should be doing it!!" For him, that activates his fear of conflict or abandonment, which moves him from a calm state to defensive mode (as he starts an argument and finds ways to blame you). It's not that he wants to argue, per se, it's that he can't handle that sort of confrontation without going off the rails.
Instead, you go with something like, "I've been so tired lately and my body really needs a break. It's been so hard lately getting up at 5 AM and being on the run all day long."
Note, I basically said the same thing, but it's all about you and instead of blaming him, it gives the opportunity for him to be the hero by saying, "Hey, I'll order pizza for dinner and tell the kids to pack their own stuff for tomorrow!" Maybe he doesn't even actually do more work, but he can understand those "I statements (I need, I want, I feel...)" so much better than "you statements (You never, You always, etc)". One is blame, the other is building a connection.
Again, you'll get this wrong a lot at first because you're human and this is a different way of communicating. Does that make sense?


