“That’s making ne feel upset and worked up. Do they not think I care, too? Do they think I’m not pushing you to get to the bottom of it?”
He's triangulating here too.
He's the victim. They're the perpetrators. You're the rescuer.
“Well, I think they do know that. He said he knew we were doing what we need to do.”
You didn't rescue H so you're not following the script.
That was correcting him and he didn’t take it well. Things never spun out of control, but he was very negative with me the rest of the night, upset that I didn’t agree that my parents think we’re not working on it. I tried to validate, saying if I hadn’t heard the second part of what my dad said (H said he didn’t hear it), I might have felt the same way. It didn’t do any good.
He doesn't know how to self-soothe so he uses wine and you.
He kept insisting we need to figure out what set him off so he can tell his T, but I was honest in telling him I have no clue. I told him what I said right before. He was convinced I said something that set him off. All I said was I feel ok about things and will be curious what my PCP says.
I would find it very tricky to hear this. Because on one hand he is trying to understand. If you are an optimistic person, this could hook you into hope for change. But if he doesn't understand that he is generating the dynamic himself then those must be very delicate sessions, maybe even becoming part of a drama triangle (you, the T, and him).
I’m sure I didn’t validate enough. But validating without validating the invalid is still something I’m working on. I also felt like early in the disagreement he kept making it about him — about people not realizing he cares and is helping me. Honestly, having to deal with his flareups and negativity is not helping. At all.
It sounds like you did a really good job ozzie. You were able to keep things in the orange zone.
Validating someone is more about creating a validating environment. Sometimes the conditions are such that things might go back to or stay in the yellow zone but for the most part it's about learning how to not be in the red zone all the time.
Part of being in these relationships is radical acceptance that you will toggle back and forth between being parent and partner. Validation may help you manage that dynamic with less conflict.