You are here

I can't believe he had the balls!!!!! I hate him today!!!!!

holeekrap789's picture

ok so are you ready for slapping me upside the head for being upset or giving me a much needed cyber hug....I could really use either one right now.
Here's an update to begin with. I took the advice from a few of the people from my last post.....
I am taking happy pills,exercising,eating better,losing weight, getting healthier,and looking for any happiness that comes with each day.
I got relationship rescue and have earnestly been working in it each day and it is very insightful. I can see my blame in more than I realized and I can also see how wonderful B/F can be and why I fell in love with him to start with. I finally have some hope for US!
I have been laughing and singing and dancing with my kids, I have been flirting with my B/F, dressing better and all around feeling better....THANK YOU EVERYONE FOR THE HELP GETTING HERE!!!
Now for the part that I am sooooo pissed about today...
I have several projects around here that I just didn't have the oomph or knowledge to complete. I now have the oomph and take advantage of it. Me and B/F have built three projects together this week to improve our property. We have joked and laughed and even talked about serious issues without conflict. All was going well except for the fact that I am not comfortable with his level of drinking.
It is only about two beers a day but it still bothers me. I was married to an abusive alcoholic before him and alcoholism runs in my family so I am very strict about my kids not having grownups drunk near them or giving them drugs or alcohol. I am very adamant
about this and B/F knows it.
Soooo today he started drinking his beer at about noon. he had tweo bottles before 3...not a big deal.....as we were working in the yard and flirting with eachother...heavily...I couldn't wait to get him alone tonight! From there he goes on to drink almost 1/2 gallon of wine and when I wasn't looking let my 8 and 9 yr old daughters dip their fingers in and taste it because they simply asked what was he drinking.
I am furious....this is what I consider very poor judgement on his part and total disrespect of me, my values, and my feelings! this doesn't even include the risk to the kids. Their alcoholic uncle started out with wine at thanksgiving when he was under 10, and the 9yr old has a nervous disorder that she was born with and could be dead by the time she is 15, I have to watch her health carefully. THE POSSIBLITIES THAT THIS COULD LEAD TO SCARE THE S_ _T OUT OF ME!!!!!
When I told him how upset I was he told me I was wrong....it was only a little bit....he was only having fun....and I was ruining everyones mood....I needed to be silly back at him and get over it.
I tried to tell him that it isn't that easy for me to "get over it" since it had just happened and we have had a few talks about this topic and only a few minutes had passed. I was still hurt and angry dammit!
Soooo what does the A_ _ H _ _ _ do now? Calls his ex to talk to her for a while.
That's it this is the icing on the cake...we argue so he calls her? what the hell is that? then he has the nerve to tell me I do it all of the time to him....I have not talked to my ex about anything personal or even when I am upset in over 3yrs I know it hurts B/F so I don't do it.
the night ended,After he joked with the kids for a while and made me look like the bad guy for my negative attitude towards him, with him slurring and stumbling, spilling his drink on the floor and telling me he was going to bed am I going to join him? I was so angry I told him where he could go! We ended this arguement with us yelling at eachother that he was moving out first thing tomorrow.
He of course is upstairs sound asleep in our bed and I can't sleep or stop crying for anything.
How am I supposed to trust him, love him, or want him when every time things start going good something like this happens?
Are all men this ignorant?
Sorry this was so long I just really needed to get it out.
Now even better yet

goingcrazy's picture

I think men are clueless on most levels. And yes you have absoltely every right to be pissed off, more than pissed. My DH's shit would have been gone. Anyone that thinks it is okay to allow a child to taste alcohol needs some serious insight into being a parent. DOes he have kids of his own? You may recommend to him that he seek help with his drinking. Sounds like he needs to drink everyday. In my wn opinion, that is not what children need. I grew up with an alcoholic father who was sober for many years, but still knowing what one more drink can do. Tomorrow tempers will be calmer, maybe sit down with him and explain how dearly you love him and want a life with him but that cannot include him drinking. Maybe look up some medical facts about alcohol and children and show him in black and white. In the meantime, don;t let this bring you down. You sound like you have been doing a great job with respecting yourself. Keep up the good work. So, sleep it off just as he is. Tomorrow will be better and remember that forgiveness is very difficult to give, but sometimes it takes us being the smarter ones to give it.

sandg3's picture

My view on this is simple. I have raised my kids...by myself~ I was strict, did NOT let my kids "taste" alcohol & they are just fine. All of them are of drinking age now, & we all go out to dinner & have a few beers/or wine together.
I was married to an alcoholic, that saw me & my boring life as he put it~ as the problem. He "never" had a drinking problme according to him. Me & my kids were always the problem.
My kids are all successful, own their own homes, hold down jobs etc. His son is in & out of jail, didn't finish college, can't hold down a job & has no financial sense.
You tell me what is right or wrong.
Your a--h--- man is NOT worth giving him another chance. Kids are soooo impressionable~ do the right thing Mom, & show them you care about morals & values & get them the hell out of there.
I am now married to a decent man who believes the same way I do. He supports everything I do. We are raising his 2 younger kids from a previous marriage & he backs me 100%. I'm telling you~ it's worth finding a guy who believes the same way you do. I was single for 11 years. It's worth the wait! Dump the drunk...he's NOT worth it!

Anne 8102's picture

Lisa, you should know by know that you can't argue with a drunk person. (Or an insane person or a mentally handicapped person or a stupid person, for that matter!) You have to wait and address it the next day when there's no alcohol being consumed. My sister let my son, who was six, I think, taste champagne and I stayed pissed off at her for a really long time. As a mother, I cannot imagine anyone letting a child drink even one drop. But she's not a mother and our grandfather used to let us sneak a sip of beer when we were kids, so she didn't think it was a big deal. Well, she's also a functional alcoholic, like our grandfather was, so naturally she would think that. She's incapable of seeing it, but very capable of rationalizing her behavior. You can't have this kind of showdown when either one or both of you have alcohol on board. It'll just make things worse and things get said and done that no one really means.

Is he doing Relationship Rescue with you? If not, I would make it a condition of him being allowed to stay. If he gets on board and commits to doing the program, then give it time. I don't know where you are in the book and exercises, but let me tell you where we are... I've read the entire book up to the end where you do the Fourteen Days thing and I'm working on completing the exercises in the workbook for Chapters 5-8. I'm waiting on the Fourteen Days thing until DH gets there so we can do that part together. Hubby is slower than me, he's still in the early chapters, but we've already progressed so much that we're sneaking off for quickies in the middle of the day while the kids are playing outside. (I know, TMI.) We talked for three hours the other day about his previous failed marriage and during that talk, I identified many of his fears and came up with an action plan for alleviating them. Since then, he's been able to open up to me emotionally like never before and we are acting - and FEELING! - like we did when we first started dating. It's unbelievably liberating.

You're going to probably get a lot of responses to dump his ass, throw him out, should've done it a long time ago, etc., but if you love each other and truly want to make a go of it, you CAN get to a better place and I think you were starting to see that before you had this setback. Keep doing what you're doing with the program, talk to him from a place of vulnerability rather than from a place of judgment, and urge him to do the work with you. It is slow going, but if you stick with it, the results can be phenomenal. By the time I got into the second section - Chapters 5-8 - I had changed to the point where it didn't matter how far behind DH was in the book, I was inspiring a different kind of behavior in him already. Now that he's catching up, he's inspiring different behavior in me.

Hang in there! And keep doing those projects together. We both enjoy refinishing furniture as a hobby and we've got three projects going right now... an antique Singer sewing machine/table, a 1942 Zenith radio and an old, oak children's desk. We talk so much while we're outside working together. We're also doing the South Beach Diet together, which my Dr. put me on for insulin resistance, and by day six I'd already lost 7 lbs and DH had lost 8 1/2 lbs! I had a hard time getting rid of those last few baby pounds, so that's just been an added benefit to treating the insulin thing.

~ Anne ~

We are the masters of our own fate; the architects of our own destiny.

didddos's picture

SS once wrote a letter to his counselor that cited the reasons why he disliked me. Reason #2 was that I got angry and yelled at his dad every time his dad was drunk. Dh read that and has an epiphany. He never realized that his son knew he was drunk. DUH! It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out he has a glass of alcohol in his hand and is acting like an idiot.

You're not wrong. Not in the least. If I had any words of wisdom, I'd share them. As it is, I'm afraid I'll be fighting this battle again myself. My dh doesn't drink often, but when he does, he loses his sense of moderation and how bad it really is in front of the kids.

happy's picture

I am not defending him at all.. Trust me. But alcoholism runs in my family too, my mom can pop open a beer sometimes on weekends by 9 am, and weeknights she drinks too. Especially now that my 'dad' has passed away. But she has always drank. SInce I was little. I am not an alcoholic, my sisters are not either. So just because it runs in the family doesn't mean your kids are going to be alchy's. My granny used to let me take drinks of her beer, and I never thought anything of it. Back in the 80's I think it was pretty common. I can see your anger and frusteration.
But look at it this way- you love this man right? Did he drink when you got with him or is this a new thing? We are not suppose to get with people to change them, are we? Aren't we suppose to love them in spite of there faults? I am just saying, if he is not abusive, which you should also not compare your past relationship with him at all because he is not that person. I can see you being upset, but if he were trying to change you why be with each other. My husband and I are by far not perfect, but I have not tried to change his habits, and vice versa.
Sorry if I seem mean or critical. I just read that and had a different take on things..

Happy

" make sure you tell the people you love most EVERYDAY.. Its important not only for them to know but for you to tell.. Life is to short to be miserable..

Bonus Wife's picture

His action of calling the ex was definitely to get under your skin.
Men ARE asses and immature. Hang in there lady.

happy's picture

calling his ex- that he is wrong. Period..
Happy

" make sure you tell the people you love most EVERYDAY.. Its important not only for them to know but for you to tell.. Life is to short to be miserable..

Anne 8102's picture

What deep, dark fears does he have - abandonment, maybe? - that would cause him to call an ex when he's done wrong and is being chastized by you? (Not that he didn't deserve an ass-whooping!) What can you do to ease those fears so that he can trust that you won't leave him when he screws up? This could eliminate him running to the ex for comforting. Food for thought!

~ Anne ~

We are the masters of our own fate; the architects of our own destiny.

Little Jo's picture

1. I have alcoholics in my family. I like to drink and know that there were times I was crossing a dangerous line. That was 15 years ago. BF drank at excess at the end of his marriage. One thing I made very clear, is the stupid need to drink in the morning or early afterenoon. Bf did it 3 or 4 times in the year and a half he has been with me. Usually, due to Darkness. To me that is just unacceptable. He has not done it in many months.

2. Drinking & getting stupid if front of the kids. That's a big 'hell no'. Next time he even thinks about that, just pour the shit down the drain, take his keys & the kids and go out for the afternoon.

3. He called who ??!!!. I would have laid into him like a ton of bricks the next morning while he was hung over.

Sorry to hear this happen. Hopefully, this is just an isolated incident.

Hugs & a slap to his head.
Jo.

"Why, if Juan Valdez had our beans, he would have shot his donkey and burned down the mountain." Jessica - Soap

holeekrap789's picture

Thank you everyone for the support...I am calmed down a little today...I just don't know where I want to go with all of this anymore. You can't talk to a drunk you guys are right about that but we have talked about this when he was sober and it wasn't a problem. He said he would abide by my rules on that for the kids....yes he was a drinker when we met and I knew this and didn't have a problem with the one or two a night as long as he didn't get drunk around the kids and didn't give it to the kids. He also knew this and agreed to it and said he would never cross me on that. I am not trying to change him but I will not back down on something so important where my kids are concerned.
Anne....you have a lot more patience than me....I gave up analyzing him a while ago because no matter how I tried to alter my attitude or behavior to "help" him...he hurt and betrayed me in return because he saw me as someone who would tolerate anything out of him against me.....I am not in the point of the book yet where I can readjust my attitude to that degree and hopefully I will be soon....but in the meantime I feel like a disrespected doormat. He is also doing the workbook. I am working on the workbook and text book at the same time but I don't think he has started the text yet....BUT ..now that he's working he doesn't have as much time as I do to do both at once...so he can take it at his pace...as long as I know he's trying I'm happy with the effort from him.
Today he is being very loving and acting as if nothing happened and it's driving me nuts.....do I just let it go? Do I lay into him and set down some ground rules that I won't back out on? Or do I come to him "humbley" and bare my heart and soul to tell him that amount of damage that I am feeling has been done?, knowing that he will tell me I'm wrong and "blow me off"....I'm not sure which pain I am more able to take at this point.
Oh well another day in the life....
Thanx everyone. Have a wonderful and blessed day!
Lisa Dawn

Anne 8102's picture

One of the first things he talks about in the book, on page 12, is about giving your partner a whole new set of behaviors and new set of stimuli to respond to. We had a running joke during this part of it where I would tell him, sometimes through gritted teeth and in a snarling voice, "You are a wonderful husband and a loving father. I appreciate all you do for us. I love you with all my heart." But I said it. And I said it over and over again, daily, until I thought I would puke. But eventually, it got easier to say, I found that I really was starting to mean it and he started to really be that wonderful husband and loving father, and soon he was saying those same things to me and meaning them. It became sort of a self-fulfilling prophecy. If you are both doing the work and making an honest effort, I think you can get there. By the time he gets through chapter 4, if he's honest, he won't be able to look at himself or you in the same light. Hang in there! If you come out the other end of this process realizing that it's not meant to be, then you'll know that decision is coming from a place of strength, not a place of weakness, and you'll feel good about it. But you could come out the other side with your relationship intact and better than you ever thought it could be. Either way, you will feel better about YOU. And hopefully, Steve will stick with it, too, and end up feeling better about himself, as well.

I almost think you should not say a word about it now, but maybe wait until you know the best way to say it and he's able to respectfully hear it and understand without a blowout. Whatever you say and however you say it is going to feel like a judgment to him. I'm not saying you should continue being a doormat, I'm just saying that there will come a point in this program where you will each get the floor and be able to say your piece, but it won't be until after you're both able to really hear what the other person is saying and understand where it's coming from. If you're not there now, then I think you're just going to either have another fight or he'll agree with you now, only to slip up again in the future. For now, I'd say nothing, do the program and see where it takes you. If you have to say something, make it brief... "Please understand that my feelings were very hurt the other night. I need for you to stick by your agreement re: drinking and being drunk in front of the kids. I'm not judging you and I don't want to pick a fight, but I hope this is something we can talk about later, once we're in a better place."

~ Anne ~

We are the masters of our own fate; the architects of our own destiny.

OldTimer's picture

I don't know if you forgot but this is the couple that loves to openly (or used to- LOL) "argue", so I'm pretty sure that Steve knows how she feels now! So, waiting to tell him is probably out of the question... LMAO...

Wink StepMom

Man has the intelligence to change his life,
Sometimes, he just fails to use it...

Anne 8102's picture

Please excuse my brainfart.

~ Anne ~

We are the masters of our own fate; the architects of our own destiny.

Cruella's picture

Steve,
I try to treat my DH exactly how I want to be treated. I am overwhelmed alot with his situation/baggage most of the time. If I turned around and called my Ex husband, well that is a deal breaker. If he did the same to me I would take it as consorting with the enemy. If you were in the Army and at war and got mad at your superiors and starting talking to a terrorist you would be called a traiter, get jailed or get SHOT!! Ok a bit dramatic but you get my point.
Reading your postings I know you are smarter than that and have common sense. Reading what we all go through with our DH's BM's
You have to know that calling your ex was totally out of line. I don't know you can blame the booze however I feel a person shows a lot of their true feelings after drinking even one or two beers. I don't want to lecture you but I do want to tell you this. I was involved with a man for 4 years and everytime we got into an argument he would call other woman that he met either in the net or ex's. I took it for 4 years and one day I just said enough. I had enough and simply walked away without a tear falling from my eyes. I never looked back. It was a relief to me not to have a man throwing another woman in my face. I am speaking as a woman when we will try our hearts out until one day we say enough and walk. It is like beating your head against a brick wall. One day you say ouch that hurts and then you stop. Don't let your relationship get to that point. Reading her postings I know she loves you!

OldTimer's picture

For someone that doesn't have a "problem", you certainly are angry aren't you?

Let me tell you... trust me. It's called denial. I've been reading your posts, and I am basing 'my assumptions' on posts from the past, and the fact that you two like to openly argue, with rebuttals, it's not my fault attitude. Get a clue and open your eyes. Your significant other is upset, she has a right to be upset, and this 'one time a year' outburst is a true indication of your intent without you even considering her feelings. Pure and simple.

You are sooo damn stubborn that you don't even realize that her last resort with you is to post her personal 'exaggerated' feelings online, because she knows that you will ultimately READ IT! DAH! Stir up a hornet's nest and ruffle your feathers, but it GOT YOUR ATTENTION didn't it. This is the only way she feels that in this situation, this particular case RIGHT NOW, is how she can get your attention... the moment that she wrote this, where were you? Think about that. Where's the communication- it's on a online forum. Her last resort was an online forum, because she felt that passionate about it.

And granted you may not like what some people have said about you, but it's our impression of you, pure and simple. Not a pretty one, is it?

Now, I know for a fact, that the first signs that there is a 'problem', because I worked for a Rehab center, thank you, is denial, denial, denial. People with problems, make great excuses for everything. They will always boost about the fact that they don't have a problem, you want to know who has a problem... so and so does. My so and so is an 'alchy', not me, etc. They redirect the issues all the time, and they do and say things when they are drinking that they wouldn't do sober. They will make lies or excuses at any cause or event for a social event, or it's 'boring'. Granted that one or two drinks 'a day' may not necessarily make you drunk, but it's an excuse to numb ones feeling, even for just a little tiny bit, it's a pattern. Yes, you may feel that you have control of it, but so do alot of other people who don't. And while right now, this very moment, you may be sober, you still have the need to numb yourself, to 'relax' with a beer each day... it's a pattern. It's redirection.

Whether you like it or not, it's causing an issue with your significant other to such a degree that she felt the need to come here, the only place she felt to get your attention, where you would feel some heat, and open your eyes. Think about that. Is that how you want her to come to you? On an online forum?

Wink StepMom

Man has the intelligence to change his life,
Sometimes, he just fails to use it...

stamina's picture

Where there is smoke, there is fire. Discussing your personal relationship online about each other probably won't get you far. Why not talk with each other instead of about each other. You obviously both have different expectations, goals, etc. for yourselves and for each other. That is a problem unless you sort it out together...or live in misery...your choice. I know what I choose for me.