IndieSolo
Active member
Dinged, AC's other guys are friends her husband has known for years, and I believe they have all attended parties and dances together before. I think you are misinterpreting some things, though I also think it is valuable for AC to see your perspective. However, do you not see that her husband blew things way out of proportion?
He is overly sensitive about his wife's friendships with these men, because he's not willing to do the work to understand and deal with his feelings about it. He has told her what his boundaries are. She has agreed, and been totally ethical and considerate of him, but he doesn't want to know anything more about what she does with them, and yet, won't let himself trust her. He struggles because he doesn't want to address it any further. Instead, he stews about it in his own mind, judges her, and feels that what she wants is shameful. He is from another culture, which influences him here, but that doesn't absolve his responsibility to handle his own emotions. There was a miscommunication and many bizarre assumptions on his part. A dance only lasts about four or five minutes, why would he think she wasn't going to be with him for the last one? He is irrational about this. If it had been anyone else she was dancing with at 11:45, I'm sure he wouldn't have blown up at her.
He is overly sensitive about his wife's friendships with these men, because he's not willing to do the work to understand and deal with his feelings about it. He has told her what his boundaries are. She has agreed, and been totally ethical and considerate of him, but he doesn't want to know anything more about what she does with them, and yet, won't let himself trust her. He struggles because he doesn't want to address it any further. Instead, he stews about it in his own mind, judges her, and feels that what she wants is shameful. He is from another culture, which influences him here, but that doesn't absolve his responsibility to handle his own emotions. There was a miscommunication and many bizarre assumptions on his part. A dance only lasts about four or five minutes, why would he think she wasn't going to be with him for the last one? He is irrational about this. If it had been anyone else she was dancing with at 11:45, I'm sure he wouldn't have blown up at her.
I asked him to join me on the main floor before midnight.
At 11:45 they announced it was the second-to-last dance before midnight, so I asked C to dance. Before the band started, my husband walked up, looking upset, and said he wanted to do the next dance with me. I said of course. I had a good dance with C, wished him a happy new year, then found my husband, who launched into an angry tirade about how I should have been with him since 11:45. Not just the last dance before midnight, but the 15 minutes before midnight. (For the kind of dancing we do, it is common practice to change partners for each dance.)
I told him that wasn't what I thought we'd planned, but that we were doing the last dance. He continued to try to convince me that I had done something wrong. I told him it didn't feel like he actually wanted to be happily enjoying dancing with me, but rather that he was trying to stake some kind of claim. ...
He has accused me of not caring about him, of not wanting to make him happy, of not wanting to dance with him as much as I wanted to dance with C. (Thank god L changed plans last minute and didn't make it.) He said I danced with C at least 6 or 8 times, when it was really only 3. He said if he hadn't come up to me when he did, I would probably have danced with C until midnight, and C would have expected a midnight kiss since he came without a date. It's like he's making up a version of reality that turns me into a bad wife, but it's not based on fact. So how can I make it right?
Ironically when I asked C for that dance, I'd actually hoped to ask the woman who had been dancing with him before that. She's someone I really like (friend-wise). But she moved off before I could get to her, so I asked C. Never realizing I was breaking my husband's unwritten 15-minutes-before-midnight rule.
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