Do you think I'm overreacting?

polypie

New member
My hubby went on a date with his new girl today. Whenever I go anywhere or do anything he always asks I keep him updated (texting if plans change, letting him know where im at). Today he left at 530am to go on a hike. In the afternoon he posted pictures online of being in a parking lot, then just now being indoors again, then 2 pics of him actually hiking. He's been gone 14 hours and the only contact he's made with me was a snapchat of him at del taco. ... I was so mad I couldn't even reply. I'm so upset I could cry. He hasn't spent more than 5 minutes of our weekend with me, our Saturday I cleaned the house alone so he could have her spend the night and he literally didn't even see 2 of our children today. I wouldn't be upset if I had anticipated he'd be gone all day. . I don't mind him doing things, but he never communicated and he hates it when it's done to him!

To top it off I'm dealing with my own emotions about the fact that I don't get to go on dates with him (no childcare) but others do. I'm feeling hurt :'(
 
Every hour that passes I feel like I have no Idea how im flung to open my mouth and tell him how I feel. I'm literally sick to my stomach. Is he even coming home? ? I assumed so since he has work in the morning, but who knows at this point. I wish I could just cry and get it out of my system.
 
You need to ask him if he's coming home. I tend to do exactly what you're doing: allow myself to spiral out of control so that something that should be easily solvable becomes the end of the world (in my mind). The reality is, he can't read your mind! You need to let him know that you're upset about him being gone the entire weekend, not seeing your kids, and not communicating. You need to find childcare. Trade another parent date nights, find a teenager that'll do it for cheap, something! Go on a date with your husband. And talk.
 
I am sorry you struggle.

I wouldn't be upset if I had anticipated he'd be gone all day. . I don't mind him doing things, but he never communicated and he hates it when it's done to him!

Whenever I go anywhere or do anything he always asks I keep him updated (texting if plans change, letting him know where im at).

Sounds like he actively works to request communication.

Do you do the same? Since you seem to want more communication? You actively asked him to let you know what's going and update if plans change?

Galagirl
 
We just both actively communicate everything. He got home at 930pm and I couldn't help it, the word vomit started as soon as he walked in the door. He immediately knew I was upset by my disposition. So I started with the fact that he told me that he was going on a hIke (a 3 hour event plus drive time) and he was gone 15 hours. I doubt like bothering him when he's out because he's very sensitive to me and I didn't want him to feel like he needed to rush home or something. I figured he was posting stuff online, he wasn't in the hospital, we could talk when he got in. I told him how I feel about dating, how crushed I am he doesn't know my adventurous side, and how heart broken I was that he never thought to update me after the hike. A simple "we have reception now, I'll be back late".. he said he understood and although I'm still upset, I feel 1000x better. I feel bad for making him feel bad. I tried to explain how happy I am he had a good date and my feelings are just my own and truly unrelated, and Ihate seeing him go to work less than happy =(
 
I think I was already upset because I'm feeling envious of the way they are able to spend time. I just don't see us being able to do anything like that for a few years.
 
Ok. We talked about everything. I've assessed my options and addressed my feelings. .I think all that's left is to feel them and move on. In the big picture, my life is beautiful and I love it. I've decided I'm allowed to have my feelings but I won't let them make my day wasted. Time to live this short and wonderful life♡
 
Time to live this short and wonderful life♡

Nice words, but your vibe tells a very different story. Are you sure that poly is right for your relationship? It doesn't sound at all to me as if you're comfortable with his having a girlfriend.
 
We just both actively communicate everything

Sounds like that is the expectation, and this time he fell short of the mark.

Things sound sorted out for now... so I'm glad for that.

Perhaps you and spouse can make childcare arrangements so you can enjoy some of these things now rather than years from now. That really seems to bother you. Work on making some friends you can swap childcare with maybe?

Just wanted to lift this up --

I feel bad for making him feel bad.

You making him aware that he fell short of the mark? That doesn't make him feel bad -- you telling you noticed this.

If his behavior choices DO fall short of the mark and you make him aware of that? And you tell him you are disappointed? That's making him aware of his behaviors and making him aware of your feelings.

And if he agrees with that assessment, and his behavior DID fall short of the mark? And his behavior choices disappoint him too? That can happen. He's allowed to be disappointed with his behavior choices.


I tried to explain how happy I am he had a good date and my feelings are just my own and truly unrelated, and Ihate seeing him go to work less than happy =(

You might want to become ok with him having his own set of feelings.

He's allowed to have that space. He's allowed to be disappointed in his behavior choices.

I could be wrong... but the way you write it almost sounds like you feel responsible for his feelings and his emotional management as well as your own emotional management.

Galagirl
 
Last edited:
Along with GalaGirl's excellent-as-always post, I want to reiterate that you are not a babysitter. If there can't be a way for the two of you to get time alone because childcare isn't an option for whatever reason, this may not be the time for your relationship to be open. He may not want to hear that, but parenting is a choice, and it changes the rest of our life. We have members here, and i know many IRL, that close their relationships in the early stages of parenting because parenting itself is a big enough challenge in terms of keeping romantic relationship alive.
 
Hi polypie,

It sounds like he was gone for much longer than he indicated he would be. I also got the impression you are reluctant to contact him when he's with someone else? I suggest taking into consideration your amount of upsetness, and contact him if you need to know what's going on, why the plans have changed, and when you can expect him to either arrive back home or at least contact you again.

Start working on a plan for how you'll prevent something like that from happening in the future.

Sincerely,
Kevin T.
 
I don't understand why your husband is not taking his wife out on dates. Where is the logic in that? He should be dating you if he thinks he can date others. Hire a babysitter and make sure you two have date nights. Why do you think your place is to sit at home waiting? Be proactive instead of playing the victim. Dates with other women shouldn't even be on his schedule if there are no dates with you! That is simply common sense!

You two never really thought this out or discussed details much before embarking on a poly life, did you?
 
Last edited:
Galagirl, I think you're pretty spot on. I have a really hard time seeing him sad, and when he's only sad because I talked about my feelings, I feel responsible. .because had I said nothing he'd be happy. But in retrospect, I now feel silly because I did nothing wrong. In our relationship we've established certain, well, promises. Just like lying and cheating is an unspoken thing we've promised to not do to eachother, we've promised to communicate our safety and locations when we are outside the home. His behaviour was so outside that norm I felt lied to, unimportant and worried. His lack of care for that left me both sad and FURIOUS. I told him that and almost instantly felt better. Still not pleased, but it took my tone down from a 100 to a 10. I don't keep anything from him. .there is no way I was not going to tell him. But my intense feelings really brought up some of my own needs I wasn't addressing, which is good, because I need to make some changes, and that little communication made him realize how much I need that change.
 
I don't understand why your husband is not taking his wife out on dates. Where is the logic in that? He should be dating you if he thinks he can date others. Hire a babysitter and make sure you two have date nights. Why do you think your place is to sit at home waiting? Be proactive instead of playing the victim. Dates with other women shouldn't even be on his schedule if there are no dates with you! That is simply common sense!

You two never really thought this out or discussed details much before embarking on a poly life, did you?

This a 110%.

I still date Butch after 15 years of being together. We still go on dates without the kids. We go do fun things together beyond the daily grind. We won't be one of those couples who don't have a bond beyond parenting.

Stop whining and change your situation.
 
I intended on replying to everyone's very valuable to me input, but life happened very sporadically and intensely all at once. Dealing with a family emergency and a dog fight at the same time as well as formula feeding rat orphans.I have not read past Galagirls post yet, but I am very excited to read on. Thank you all, just wanted to let you know I'm not ignoring you♡♡♡
 
But my intense feelings really brought up some of my own needs I wasn't addressing, which is good, because I need to make some changes, and that little communication made him realize how much I need that change.

In the short term, it sounds like you eventually got what you needed here in terms of more/clearer communication. Glad that happened.

In the medium term, I think you guys could make some dates without children. PAY if you have to -- take advantage of community centers having "parent's night out" activities, make friends to swap sitting with, etc.

In the long term, I think you could work on this:

I have a really hard time seeing him sad, and when he's only sad because I talked about my feelings, I feel responsible. .because had I said nothing he'd be happy.

I could be wrong but you seem stuck in something like this kind of thinking:

1) I see him sad.

2) I believe I am responsible for his feelings and his emotional management. (core belief)

3) So I take it personally. I explain his sadness to myself by relating it to something I recently did. I recently told him about my feelings. I decide me telling him about my feelings CAUSE his sad feelings. Rather than each of us just experiencing some "meh" feelings at the same time. (Correlation is not causation)

4) I decide if I had said nothing, then he would be happy.

5) I affirm my belief that I can control his feelings -- I bring him happy or bring him sad. I control his emotional management. Win for me -- I was "right."

6) At the same time, lose for me. It stinks because I don't like seeing him sad, so to "keep" him happy I have to not express my own feelings.


I think you might end up feeling emotionally clogged up a lot if keep doing thinking behavior like that. And if you don't figure out a way for you to have and express your feelings. And let him have and express his feelings. Without all the tangled up. Could work on changing that core belief.

But in the meanwhile? Could stick to BEHAVIOR. What happened here in terms of behavior?

  • You guys have agreement to check in if plans change.
  • He was out way late and did not directly call or check in to update plans. He did not hold up his end of the agreement.
  • You make him aware that his behavior did not meet agreement. You ask for apology and change in future behavior. Because this is not acceptable to you.
  • He apologized? Will change future behavior? Seems like it.

If he's sad about all this, let him be sad. It's his feelings to process. It's part of healing from all this. Whether he's sad his behavior choices were short of the mark. Or for some other reason. It's his stuff.

There is your stuff. There is his stuff. And the shared responsibilities can be "our stuff." Could file things in the right bucket. It cannot ALL be in the "your stuff" bucket.

(What he did in his behaviors) and (how you feel about what he did)... that's two separate conversations. Trying to have two conversations at once? Coupled with trying to do your emotional management in a situation as well as you doing his emotional management?

Too tangled up and potentially draining. I think that adds to the yuck rather than take away.

Lighten your load some. What do you think would happen if he did his emotional management?

Galagirl
 
Last edited:
I think that you are, as always spot on. I'm won't ever be pleased that he fell short, but I realize he's only human. I made a mistake the other day, violating his trust and our communicated boundaries. We don't do these things regularly, but I know neither of us are going to always be prefect. If I cannot forgive him (or vice versa) for these unintentional opps' moments, then we have a bigger issue. But I need to deal with the fact that he's not always going to smile when I communicate with him. We've worked through this one and I'm grateful for all of your input ♡
 
you need to communicate your feelings in a way that is not making him hate himself for the jerk that he is being. I knw it sjnds hard but when you get the meessage across, he will have an epiphany. Hope it helps. Hope it is not too late.
 
Back
Top