Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Woman tired of husband who’s always tired of his job

- CAROLYN HAX Email Carolyn at tellme@washpost.com, follow her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/carolyn.hax or chat with her online at noon Eastern time each Friday at www.washington­post.com.

Adapted from an online discussion.

Dear Carolyn: My husband is very frustrated with his job. I cannot recall a time that he liked – or was even neutral – about any of the jobs he’s had during our marriage or even when we were dating. I guess I’m tired of the complainin­g. Jobs aren’t fun all the time and sometimes bosses suck. Isn’t that part of life? I’ve tried to offer constructi­ve ideas, but I am dismissed. So am I supposed to just feel sorry for him for the rest of time? Occasional­ly, some of his complaints are valid and I’d be annoyed, too, but it’s similar to the little boy who cried wolf – all the other times where I had to fake sympathy have just depleted my sympathy reserves. I guess I don’t know what to do. I don’t want to add to his stress, but I also am pretty sick of the whining. Thoughts?

Depleted

Depleted: Firmly, but not unkindly, the next time he starts in: “I cannot recall a time that you liked – or were even neutral – about a job. Can you think of a time you were at peace? Can that point you to a better fit?” Let him process that before you say anything else. Maybe he’ll have an aha moment. If not – if he balks or gets defensive (again, not unkindly): “I’m not saying your complaints aren’t valid. But jobs aren’t fun all the time and sometimes bosses suck. So I don’t know how to help.” Again, give him room to respond – and also listen with your mind open to his perspectiv­e. Maybe he’s had successive, objectivel­y terrible workplaces. If he just pushes back: “I’ve tried to offer constructi­ve ideas and just listen, and it isn’t working and I’m wearing down.” Then, hope he at least comes up with instructio­ns for you. Then you can say what roles you are and aren’t comfortabl­e filling. Being supportive isn’t just about soothing and agreeing. Sometimes it means you admit what you’re seeing and either hold up the mirror or ask explicitly what to do. Re: Work: This is me. I hate every job I have ever had. My husband is well aware of this and is exceedingl­y tolerant of it, since I have changed jobs every two years since we met and I complain about every job ... a lot. I know I need to change something – get out of this profession, find something I am more passionate about and would enjoy doing – but I ruminate on that all the time and have not reached a conclusion. Maybe he is in the same rumination station and just cannot figure out a good path?

Hate My Job

Hate My Job: Passion sounds like a high bar. Don’t rule out going in the other direction, where you accept work as work and find something that meets only two criteria: revenue-positive, pain-neutral. There’s a whole cohort out there working at Whatever because it’s just fine and it allows them to live their lives. The work-to-live crowd. Worth a thought, at least. Pardon the unasked-for advice.

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