| Return Create A Forum - Home | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Bad Manners and Brimstone | |
| https://badmanners.createaforum.com | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Return to: Family and Children | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| #Post#: 67961-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: peony Date: July 7, 2021, 6:17 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I was reading a letter in Dear Prudence's July 6 column today: | |
| My Husband is Threatening Divorce Because He Can't Take My Dad's | |
| Bullying Any More. While it's true the husband stepped over a | |
| line and was much more than rude to the dad, Prudence was | |
| entirely on the father's and daughter's side and utterly | |
| dismissed the fact that the husband had been needled and | |
| tormented for years by the father's bad conduct without any | |
| support from his wife. Prudence's obliviousness to the reasons | |
| for the husband's explosion really bothers me, and I was | |
| wondering what you all think. | |
| #Post#: 67964-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: lowspark Date: July 7, 2021, 8:47 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Here's a link to the story. | |
| https://slate.com/human-interest/2021/07/dad-bullied-husband-threatening-divorc… | |
| I have to wonder how accurate the LW is when she says, "my | |
| husband�whom I had never previously seen angry". | |
| Really? He's never even been angry before and then he goes WAY | |
| off the deep end like this? | |
| In any case, it looks like the husband bottled up his anger and | |
| emotions and when the cork finally blew off, it released all the | |
| pent up feelings in one explosion. Not good. | |
| Everyone in this story needs counselling. Dad needs to come to | |
| terms with the fact that he needs to back off teasing people who | |
| don't want to be teased, plus the fact that he has been so | |
| relentlessly targeting the husband. Husband needs counselling to | |
| learn how to deal with adversity instead of holding it in till | |
| he explodes. Wife needs counselling to deal with both dad's and | |
| husband's behaviors in addition to her own. | |
| Only then can there be hope of reconciliation between husband | |
| and wife, which should be the first thing to be repaired, if | |
| that's even desired or possible. I would say that there's almost | |
| no hope of reconciliation between dad and husband. They just | |
| need to stay miles apart. | |
| #Post#: 67965-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: Isisnin Date: July 7, 2021, 9:23 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Totally agree with Lowspark. Everyone needs counseling. | |
| Agree with you too, Peony. Prudence is oblivious to the reason | |
| for husband's explosion - the father's bullying. That is a tacit | |
| acceptance of the bullying. And for the husband to apologize and | |
| not the father, that would also be tacit acceptance of the | |
| father's bullying. And I agree with the husband that should be | |
| bullying continue, the kids should not be around the father as | |
| they could learn that behavior. | |
| On the other hand, the husband's physical, life-threatening | |
| explosion is not acceptable either. I hope the kids weren't | |
| there to witness it. That is not something the kids should learn | |
| either. | |
| Unfortunately, some people are like the father. They have | |
| abusive behaviors and are asked to stop. But they don't until | |
| the victim does something more than say "please stop". I've had | |
| to do that. I've put my hand out in a stop motion and said in a | |
| strong voice "Stop that. I've asked you repeatedly to stop. | |
| Stop.". Then I'm told I need to control my temper and I'm too | |
| sensitive. But the bullying stops. You don't have to get | |
| physical or life-threatening for standing your ground to work. | |
| That family seems to have a lot of issues though. The wife said | |
| she told her father that her husband doesn't like him - so she | |
| fanned the flames. Then she warned the father to stop. She | |
| didn't ask him or tell him to stop. She warned him. That | |
| indicates that she thought the husband would loose his temper. | |
| If she can't get her family into therapy, she should go herself. | |
| #Post#: 67966-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: Hmmm Date: July 7, 2021, 9:36 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I agree with Lowspark. | |
| I think the wife needs to start the rounds of apologies. I know | |
| I would feel a tremendous amount of responsibility if I had let | |
| something go on so long that it drove my husband to violence | |
| (that is if she is honest about this being first time she has | |
| seen him angry). That apology to him may help reduce his anger | |
| enough to make him agree to apologizing for the violence. | |
| Then the father needs to offer a very sincere apology for his | |
| actions and his responsibility for the blow up. If the father | |
| refuses to accept that it was his actions that drove an | |
| otherwise reasonable and contained man to violence, then I would | |
| reduce contact with him and support the husband's decision to | |
| stay away from him. | |
| But counseling for all. | |
| #Post#: 67968-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: BeagleMommy Date: July 7, 2021, 10:12 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I agree that everyone in this scenario needs counseling - | |
| including the LW. | |
| She should have stepped in way before the husband's explosion | |
| and said something like "Dad, if you don't stop bullying my | |
| husband I will have to stop having you over/coming over". Her | |
| father; her problem. She also shouldn't phrase it as if her | |
| husband is the sole person with the problem (i.e. Husband | |
| doesn't like it when you tease him). | |
| She seems to have the attitude of "this is how Dad is". Not | |
| good. | |
| #Post#: 67970-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: OnyxBird Date: July 7, 2021, 10:22 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Personally, I have very little confidence in the LW's | |
| description accuracy, so I find it amazing that the columnist | |
| immediately takes it as gospel. She's never even "seen [him] | |
| angry" in "many years," yet has somehow known for years that her | |
| father's bullying was upsetting him, with no explanation of what | |
| she did observe? But made zero effort to protect the husband | |
| from the pranks and teasing other than repeatedly warning the | |
| father after he repeatedly ignored that? And then he goes from | |
| no signs of anger that the LW recognizes as such to not just | |
| violence and "roaring" death threats but "put[ting] a fist | |
| straight through the brick work"? Not drywall, not just a | |
| vaguely described wall, but "brick work." What kind of brick | |
| work do these people have that someone can put a fist through it | |
| without breaking their hand? | |
| I have no idea what actually happened between the father and | |
| husband, but the LW sounds like either the least observant | |
| person on the planet, a severely unreliable narrator, or somehow | |
| married to a Vulcan with superstrength/super-invulnerability who | |
| finally snapped. | |
| #Post#: 67971-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: Aleko Date: July 7, 2021, 10:52 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| It's quite likely that when LW said she had never previously | |
| seen her husband angry, she actually meant she had never before | |
| seen him show anger, or react angrily when something riled him. | |
| She makes clear that she knew perfectly well how much her father | |
| riled him, so I don't think she was being dishonest, just not | |
| conveying her meaning very accurately. | |
| #Post#: 67972-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: OnyxBird Date: July 7, 2021, 11:48 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=Aleko link=topic=2100.msg67971#msg67971 | |
| date=1625673157] | |
| It's quite likely that when LW said she had never previously | |
| seen her husband angry, she actually meant she had never before | |
| seen him show anger, or react angrily when something riled him. | |
| She makes clear that she knew perfectly well how much her father | |
| riled him, so I don't think she was being dishonest, just not | |
| conveying her meaning very accurately. | |
| [/quote] | |
| She may not be deliberately dishonest, but "unreliable narrator" | |
| doesn't require deliberate dishonesty. If she knew it was | |
| bothering him for years, then he must have been conveying those | |
| emotions in some form, even if that is flat-out saying "I am | |
| angry/upset/sad" (even just saying "I don't like your father" if | |
| that's how she reached her conclusion communicates that there is | |
| some negative emotion happening). | |
| Here's the thing: Her story is that he doesn't show anger (but | |
| in some undescribed way showed that he was unhappy with her | |
| father's behavior) for many years and then suddenly goes to | |
| violence and death threats with zero warning. It's technically | |
| possible but extremely weird. So my question is what counts as | |
| "showing anger" to her? Does this family (where bullying a | |
| family member known to dislike it for "many years" is | |
| normalized) actually recognize/acknowledge any expression of | |
| anger short of screaming? Nothing in her explanation indicates | |
| how he has reacted previously or how this family overall | |
| handles/interprets normal expressions of emotion before | |
| describing this incredibly over-the-top reaction. Has he really | |
| shown no anger before now, or has he for years been using | |
| socially appropriate expressions of anger that have been ignored | |
| because they don't rise to an unignorable level? (Not that that | |
| excuses violence/death threats, but like I said, her account | |
| doesn't add up to me in multiple ways, so I'm not convinced that | |
| was an objective description.) | |
| Again, I can't see how the description of the | |
| explosion--specifically putting a fist through "brick work"--is | |
| plausible without serious damage to the hand (which is not | |
| alluded to in any way), which suggests to me that she is | |
| (consciously or not) either using hyperbole or misunderstanding | |
| elements of what she saw. | |
| ETA: I have personally dealt with people where I could find | |
| basically no middle ground of conveying a problem between "they | |
| don't register it as a complaint" and "they act like you're | |
| overreacting and saying the sky is falling." That threshold was | |
| well below violence and threats, but I highly doubt they could | |
| have accurately described what I actually said in either | |
| case--in one circumstance they would have claimed (and I think | |
| genuinely believed) that I'd never expressed any | |
| dissatisfaction, and in the other they thought I was being | |
| overly negative to the point of accusing a colleague of | |
| basically indoctrinating me with complaints about the | |
| organization, when what happened from my perspective is that I | |
| mildly increased the strength of my wording and let some more | |
| frustration bleed into my tone. | |
| #Post#: 67973-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: sandisadie Date: July 7, 2021, 12:00 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Isn't it possible that this LW, who grew up with this bully of a | |
| father, hasn't recognized her husband's anger and disgust as | |
| pertains to her father because she is also a bully, in her own | |
| way? Her story doesn't add up to me. How could her husband | |
| have put up with her father for years and she is just now seeing | |
| how it affects him? Facts seem to be missing from this story. | |
| #Post#: 67978-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Dear Prudence July 6 letter | |
| By: peony Date: July 7, 2021, 3:52 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| I'm thinking that LW has lived in that type of environment for | |
| so many years she sees the situation as normal and brushes off | |
| her husband's pent-up irritation as just the way things are in | |
| families. I am not defending the husband's reaction but I see it | |
| as the outcome of years of putting up with insults and | |
| "teasing." I agree, everybody involved could use counseling. | |
| Edited to add that I would have posted the link, but I wasn't | |
| sure it was allowed. | |
| Also edited to add that LW's seeming oblivious to the extent of | |
| her husband's anger reminds me of someone whose significant | |
| other has left them, claiming "it came out of the blue! There | |
| was no warning! They never let me know anything was wrong!" I | |
| would bet yeah, they did, probably lots of times, and when they | |
| weren't heard they just gave up trying to communicate. | |
| ***************************************************** | |
| Next Page |