Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Husband emotionall­y abuses family

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Hi, Carolyn: I have two boys, 11 and 13, from my first marriage, and forming a cohesive family with my husband of two years has been difficult. When we fight about the kids, my husband explodes on everyone and then just checks out. He is distant, shows no affection and barely talks to anyone in the house until he decides to come back into the fold.

Two weeks ago we had a blow-up fight about the boys; I butted into an aggressive exchange between him and my older son where I felt I had to protect my child from my husband’s caustic, totally unreasonab­le behavior. I was told what a failure I was as a mother because the boys are so poorly behaved. We got the silent treatment for most of a week, then things were patched up, then another fight, then silence/resentment.

My husband is now back to “normal” and being the loving, funny, kind person he often is. However, I’m just waiting for him to explode again, because the boys are normal for their age, which means they behave badly sometimes.

He’s willing to go back to couple’s therapy, but he doesn’t address any underlying issues with me. I have done a lot of therapy solo, but we recently moved so I don’t have a local therapist. – Lost Faith

Lost Faith: This is urgent, so please extend your search. Your old provider(s) may offer telehealth options. Ask the boys’ pediatrici­an for help and describe their stepfather’s emotional abuse.

That’s what it is when you’re shouted at, given the silent treatment and called “a failure as a mother” in front of them.

Since counseling hasn’t moved him, you’re the one who must learn from it. Whether you stay married or split up, you’ll need ways to remain steady and present through intense emotional times and punitive behaviors.

Since he’s counseling-receptive, steer him toward parenting education. (Couple’s counseling with an abuser is not recommende­d: bit.ly/WarnAbuse.) You’re right, even good kids make bad mistakes: Your husband sounds ignorant of child developmen­t norms.

This is a separate issue from the abuse, mind you – it’s the trigger. You need to deal with both the trigger and the explosions – the nice-then-BOOM-thensilent treatment cycle, which is the classic abuse formula.

If he won’t see the problem and work on it in earnest, now, you need to choose the lesser harm, a separation or an abuser in the house. Talk to a lawyer now, privately, so you’re ready.

Community comments: He’s not “loving, funny, kind.” He’s volatile, unpredicta­ble and a danger to your children’s psychologi­cal health.

Your local domestic violence agency may have support groups. [RAINN: 800656-HOPE.] This is 100 percent emotional abuse, spoken as a survivor.

He holds you and the boys accountabl­e for their poor behavior. Who does he hold accountabl­e for his poor behavior?

Keep trying with therapy, keep your kids close and have an exit plan.

Momma did not say anything about how she addresses the issues when the boys misbehave. Even if she handles things badly, that doesn’t excuse his exploding or checking out.

 ?? Carolyn Hax ??
Carolyn Hax

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