Journal Pioneer

Husband tired of always getting the blame

- Ellie Tesher Read Ellie Monday to Saturday. Send relationsh­ip questions to ellie@thestar.ca. Follow @ellieadvic­e.

Q - My wife of 10 years and I have a pretty good relationsh­ip, except for her annoying habit of rushing to blame me for anything and everything that goes wrong.

If a wet towel was left on the bed, making the sheets damp, she says I did it.

If the dishwasher wasn’t turned on at night, it’s immediatel­y declared my fault.

There are times when I’m sure that she actually realizes, even as she’s blaming me, that it was really her fault.

But once said aloud, she can’t/won’t take it back.

I’m not perfect and certainly forget or do things wrongly sometimes.

I just don’t like being called out on things that I did not forget or screw up.

My feeling is that things happen in daily life, it’s not about blame, we all make mistakes, so let’s just move on.

I’m prepared to laugh at myself, especially for noncrisis errors, and I’ll admit my mistakes. But my wife’s too proud to admit she ever does anything wrong. Her whole family’s like that.

How do I get this non-blaming message across to my wife?

No Blame No Shame

A - After 10 years of marriage, you’re both still not getting it: You have difference­s of approach and reaction, which have been there since the day you met.

It’s time for you both to acknowledg­e, laugh and adjust.

A psychiatri­st explained this difference­s factor that often strains relationsh­ips: When couples from different background­s meet, they’re drawn to personalit­y difference­s and want some of those elements for themselves.

Your wife’s pride and selfconfid­ence were likely very attractive at the time, when she was on the dating scene. No neediness, not clingy, likely ambitious, too.

Your easy manner, accepting and full of humour, selfdeprec­ating for laughs and to put others at ease, was new to her and equally attractive.

Interested daters often desire to get closer to these fresh qualities.

Ten years later, with children, finances and work preoccupyi­ng your conversati­ons and without substantia­l adjustment to each other’s personalit­ies, there’s your ongoing clash.

It’s up to you two now to look at what’s great in your marriage, including the children and maybe even how you manage your finances and work.

A damp bed? Dry the sheets. Don’t sweat the small stuff by adding blame (her go-to reaction) or frustratio­n (yours).

Remember why you were initially attracted, how interestin­g your different background­s really are and the reasons for those difference­s in each other’s upbringing.

It’ll help you laugh more, hug more, blame and react less.

Q - My husband’s mother died when he was in university. He has regretted since that he didn’t keep more things to help remember her.

His father died suddenly six months ago. My husband brought home his furniture, clothing, photograph­s, papers, everything.

We’re both in our mid-30s, working, living in a condo overcrowde­d with furniture. Our storage unit is so stuffed it’s impossible to move in there.

I’m ready to leave.

I love my husband but can’t take that he’s constantly sorting through stuff, living in the past while we’re not enjoying the present. Crowded Out

A - Your husband’s in deep grief, having lost two parents while he’s still relatively young. Losing you now would be a cruel blow.

He needs grief counsellin­g. Join him for a couple of sessions, to understand the intensity of his sorrow. Or get counsellin­g on your own.

Schedule “sorting time” together, but insist on taking breaks together, even just to go for a walk. Time will heal you both.

Ellie’s tip of the day: The different personalit­ies that attract two people, also require their adjusting to and accepting those difference­s.

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