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jenny lucas Online
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- Posts: 9648
- Joined: Mon Oct 07, 2013 5:39 pm
Fri Nov 30, 2018 10:33 am
May I say that with two children, the priority has to be them, not your husband, or you? It sounds like your husband's condition has 'driven' the family for far too long, setting priorities and everyone has to 'fit in' around what HE wants (even if he can't cognitively understand that, because of his ASD and the 'adverse effects' that has - eg, being 'out of it' all evening).
If it truly is impossible for him to change ANY of his adverse behaviour (and I don't mean that he is 'unwilling' I mean that his non-neurtotypical brain makes him cognitively incapable of changing) (ie, he's not 'selfish' he's 'out of control of his own moral decisions') (eg, to sacrifice some of his work time to family time/wife time) (if, if if that is so!), then I think, for now, like it or not (sigh), as ever YOU have to be the one to 'adjust'.....
This isn't fair, but then, I guess, were he say, in a wheelchair, then you would have to 'adjust' in the sense of being the 'mobile' person in the family. It would just be 'part of the deal' in that marriage....
Whilst I congratulate you wholeheartedly on your PhD studies, unless they are directly feeding into immediate post-doc job prospects that would radically change your family's fianances, then they are not an absolute priority in your life.....not compared with your sons.
Sadly, it's difficult enough for your sons growing up with an 'affected' dad (I'm not going to debate whether ASD etc is or isn't a 'good thing', only that it is a 'different' thing from 'most dads'). (This would be the same if he were in a wheelchair, so I'm not saying it because it is a 'mental' thing!). Like it or not, you do have to do what you can to 'compensate' for them in that respect.
In the end, their childhood is short - your older one will be off to college within five years, and your younger one in less than ten. They will be 'gone' from your daily lives. Is not then the time to pick up your studies 'for yourself'?
I don't say this lightly, but, in the end, when we become parents we can only do so on the basis that our children MUST take precedence over our own wants etc etc. As you will one day find, the 'empty nesting' period lasts a LONG time (until grandkids finally appear!).
I do apologise if this appears to criticise you when you are already under pressure, and I would say exactly the same thing if you didn't have a 'different' husband!
But it does seem to me, on the surface, that the 'most expendable' item on your 'over-busy' agenda is your studies - even if, sadly, that is the ONE thing that is keeping you sane! Could you at least 'slow down' on them as Mrs A asks?? PhDs are usually pretty time-flexible, so I would hope that might be so.
And I also agree with Mrs A that if your hubby INSISTS on 'over-working' then use that 'over-work' element of his salary to pay for help in the house ....or, even better, save for rainy days so YOU can maybe cut back on work as well.
I guess, in the end, my recommendation boils down to 'giving up' more on your husband (because it's stressing you out!), and doing as much, much, much as possible with your boys - as THEY need you now, but won't in years to come. And you won't have them either in years to come.......they'll be off on their own lives.
And I also agree with the suggestions for YOU to get counselling. (The only time I did this in my life was when I had to go back to work with a toddler in a nursery, and absolutely NO 'me time' at all - I nearly cracked. Counselling helped me see the wood for the trees, and on the back of it I 'negotiated' - with my husband! - a day off work AND child-care a week. That was my 'one day weekend' entirely to myself. Oh, and I got a cleaner. And my sanity back!)