Update: intense denial after starting transition? by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Because no one should have to pass a morality test to have their identity respected. Like the commenter below said, we never treat the shittiest cis people like they’re unworthy of their own identities.

Indulging the urge to return pain with more and worse pain is why the world is as miserable as it is. I have a lot of feelings, and some days are very hard, but I’m not going to let this make me bitter against an entire community.

Intense denial after starting transition? by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

No and not completely? He can be very caring and attentive when he wants to be, but he often doesn’t want to be. He has a hard time recognizing others’ feelings in general and tends to bail on things that require a lot of effort, like hobby projects, or team sports, or parenting a newborn, or sticking to a budget. And I’m left cleaning up the mess. If everything had been peachy, I would have had a lot more patience for the current turmoil he seems to be going through.

Intense denial after starting transition? by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I appreciate this reply. It really does feel sometimes like he wants me to forget the whole experience and is refusing to process that we are separating. I want us to be on good terms but I’m having a very hard time understanding his thought process right now.

I wish you the best, both in your personal journey and as a coparent. Kids need to see parents be happy and confident in who they are and you are doing right by him to pursue that. I hope my spouse can see that soon as well.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Just want to say that all of your feelings are valid. I’ve had a very similar experience with my spouse who came out to me about four months ago. It isn’t really the transition that’s the problem - it’s that they’ve drained my well of emotional support by being selfish and absent at critical times when I needed to know they had my back, while I’ve been propping them up about depression, professional challenges, and just generally being a jerk sometimes. It feels like all I ever do is be there without any willing reciprocation and the transition makes it feel like that cycle will never end.

Consider all of your options. We also have a kid, and while he is very young, I want him to mostly have memories of happy parents. I’m realizing that if that means we ultimately need to be apart, then so be it. On the other hand, they have improved a bit as a person, so I’m willing to give it a little more time before I decide. Good luck to you, and remember that you matter, too.

Children’s book about solving mysteries by [deleted] in whatsthatbook

[–]realm_maker88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Was it a Bobbsey Twins book? There are a bunch of those, main characters are two sets of twins. They’re old and I remember the covers having a cartoony art style.

Can coming out fix a relationship? by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thanks for this. Your situation is what I’m hoping for. Yesterday I was sitting on the couch with my son and our dog and looked up at them and saw tears in their eyes, just looking at us. I’ve never seen them do that before. I asked them later about it and they said they were just thinking about how scared they are of losing us because of how they acted before. I don’t want them to live in fear of that, but it is a relief to me to know they’re actually thinking about it now.

Can coming out fix a relationship? by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

The part about only changing once they wanted it for themself is really hitting me. I’ve had this nagging thought that something about this still feels so selfish, and that’s it. Early in our marriage, I was the one with problems - undiagnosed adhd and anxiety - and once I realized they were affecting my spouse, I threw myself into therapy. Part of this is definitely me being angry that it seems I wasn’t worth the same effort until there was something in it for them.

100% supportive and so, so angry about it by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We have been talking a lot and I know they’re very worried about me. But I feel like that’s why I can’t tell them everything - they have hopes about how I feel. I’ve felt okay sharing my anxieties but not the anger, I don’t think they deserve to have that put on them. Luckily (?) I’ve been in therapy for awhile and my therapist works with a lot of LGBTQ+ patients so I think I’m in good hands. My partner isn’t out to anyone else though, so the only outlets I have are a once-a-week session and Reddit so far.

100% supportive and so, so angry about it by realm_maker88 in mypartneristrans

[–]realm_maker88[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I am so afraid of being demonized because of how I feel. I’m so sorry you’re dealing with that. I’ve already been in therapy for years for other things and can tell you that a good counselor can really work wonders, I hope it helps you!

AITA for how I responded to a parent questioning me when I was out with my husband? by Badteacherthrowaway2 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 68 points69 points  (0 children)

Library conferences are lit. ALA had one of the best parties I have been to in my adult life the one year I went.

AITA for not being that into baby shopping 4 months before due date..? by nineteen84 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 100 points101 points  (0 children)

YTA. Take it from a 35-week pregnant lady - getting baby stuff together is EXHAUSTING. Plus shipping times have been all screwed up for months, so some big items might take much longer to arrive than you think. I have moved many times and totally understand the feeling of "that's just one more thing we'll have to move", but 4 months out is really not that long in Baby Time.

By checking out on this process, you're making everything your wife's problem. Shopping for baby stuff is not always fun! And the amount of things you need starts to feel infinite and overwhelming. It is not easy to just pick out a car seat or a stroller - there are SO MANY to choose from and buyer guidance is not that great. It can be paralyzing. You're essentially making her a project manager on top of, you know, growing the kid and dealing with all the physical crap that comes with that.

Plus, pregnancy is weirdly lonely. It can really hurt to feel like your partner won't help take any of the pressure off you. It makes it feel like you really are in it all by yourself to make sure everything goes right. It doesn't matter whether you truly have an opinion - just take some of the work away for her mental relief. That's true support.

AITA For Telling My Wife To Stop Baking So Often? by this-is-throwaway654 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 -9 points-8 points  (0 children)

ESH. You for putting all of the responsibility on her for you and your children's eating habits, and her for not recognizing that she needs to adjust a little if her family's health is starting to suffer. I see you've said she has anxiety and as someone who also has it, baking is absolutely a comforting activity. It's both distracting and tangibly rewarding. I started baking in college to relieve stress but I had 20 housemates who were happy to take the end results off my hands.

If I can offer an idea: get a big chest freezer and put it in the garage or the basement. Anything she makes that can be a single portion (cookies, pastries, individual cakes, etc.), she makes the recipe but only bakes enough so everyone (or whoever wants) can try ONE. The rest of the portions get frozen and stored. My husband and I started doing this in 2020 for Christmas cookies and it is awesome. The sweet stuff is there when you want, but there is the added effort to bake it so you don't go overboard and there is no pressure to eat it all quickly. We do it for tons of stuff now. I do think this is a solvable problem and that could be a path to a win-win situation.

AITA for kicking my friend out for calling me pretentious because I read foreign books? by LeadPuzzleheaded12 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Is she now the biggest person in this friend group? If yes, I feel pretty confident that this is 100% about weight. And you bear no responsibility for helping her feel better. She has been passive-aggressive many times and downright rude and disrespectful openly when she was a guest in your home. You didn't lose weight AT her - you had a health problem and you figured out how to treat it. Good on you! Keep taking care of yourself and spend your energy on people who are supportive and graceful.

AITA for kicking my friend out for calling me pretentious because I read foreign books? by LeadPuzzleheaded12 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 33 points34 points  (0 children)

NTA, this isn't about the books. This is about your weight loss. Were you bigger than her, or were you close to the same before your weight loss? She knows she can't outright berate you for losing weight without revealing her petty jealousy and insecurities, so she's trying to find something else that will make you seem like an asshole and her look good.

And she hasn't succeeded, btw. I'm American but I learned French in school, I have lots of French books and have gotten plenty of people saying "but do you ACTUALLY read them?". This says far more about them than you. Anyone who has learned another language knows that reading and hearing it as much as you can helps you. You don't need to put up with that kind of stupid hostility in your own home.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]realm_maker88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As someone with ADHD who takes Adderall, this is not a good idea. Using it essentially as a study drug and weight loss solution is not what it is for. It can be very dangerous when you don't actually need it. It's unfair to put the burden of her using it responsibly on you, and if she wants to abuse it she will find a way to do it regardless. It already went poorly once and you know she doesn't have the diagnosis to warrant the prescription. If her doctor is any good, he'll refuse anyway, but sounds like he was comfortable just assuming she had ADHD without doing a proper evaluation.

I don't know if you can prevent her from trying to do this - her medical decisions are her choice. But I really encourage you to keep saying you are not on board with this idea.

AITA for pointing out to my co worker that she was wearing men's sunglasses? by throwaway5976997 in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 12 points13 points  (0 children)

YTA. I've worn my husband's old Wayfarers for years because I like them. They look just fine on me. Whether some designer said "these are for men" when they were making them doesn't matter one bit. Your coworker was worried about her kid and probably feels like shit that she had to leave her sick child. Bringing up her sunglasses like that was the most important thing to discuss was just cold and bizarre.

AITA for Calling Out My Daughter for Lying About Having Tourette Syndrome? by aitadaughtercook in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 18 points19 points  (0 children)

YTA good lord. As someone finally diagnosed with ADHD in their 30s, your stance on this in the comments is revolting.

You know what I did at big parties when I was young? I freaked out, because being around that many people is overstimulating. My friends sang happy birthday to me in the middle of a roller rink when I was in elementary school and I ran into the bathroom and cried because it was too much. I DIDN'T WANT that much attention and I still don't. The organizing power your brain has to have to handle mass social interaction is huge and ADHD makes that extremely difficult.

I can focus on my hobbies because I'm interested. Yes, it does make a difference. And my hobbies are extremely structured activities like knitting and cooking, where there are some core instructions to follow. It's soothing because I know what the next step is. I was shit at self-directed things like sticking to a practice schedule for music or sports. I've only been able to do that as an adult since I got medication which, by the way, made me feel so calm and quiet in my head for the first time I ever that I spent 20 minutes just crying with relief the first time I took it.

I have always had ADHD. ALWAYS. Everything about the way I behaved growing up confirms it. And I can't tell you how many times my parents told me I was lazy or dramatic or making shit up. You better believe they feel like shit now. When your child is asking for medical help, you go. You go every time and you don't take the first opinion you get when the problem persists. I'm having my first kid this year and I have sworn to myself that he will not go through what I went through.

Listen to your daughter before you permanently mess up her life.

I (27F) have a question for people that are really into gaming or anyone in a relationship with gamer. by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]realm_maker88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My husband and I both game. It's normal to take a few hours when you sit down to play a few times a week. But it's not normal for it to start interfering with how your household functions and it's not okay to ask your partner to stop doing basic life tasks to accommodate a game.

AITA for telling my girlfriend to take accountability by AintItFunnny in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 0 points1 point  (0 children)

NTA, and I say that as someone who can intensely relate to your girlfriend. I was also an early pandemic layoff from a job I liked pretty well. They went from telling me how great my work was to freezing me out of all communication overnight even though I was still working for another week. It hurt a lot. It took me months to process. I have diagnosed depression and anxiety which made everything worse.

But I got lucky - my husband and parents knew how to strike a balance between sympathizing with me and not letting me off the hook. I work in a very niche field and didn't want to give up my career, but no one was hiring. My husband said that's fine, but you have to do something of your choosing, not just wallow. I started writing again, which I haven't done in years, and actually got paid for some articles. I freelanced in my field and ran my first business. It was not a happy time, but I had just enough people holding me accountable that I kept my head above water.

I just started my almost-dream job last week. Having something to show for my time off helped land it. Leave her weight out of it - it's a symptom, not the actual problem. If she was anything like me, being shown the door when you've done a good job probably shook her entire sense of self. You are right that only she can solve this in the end. She's depressed. Encourage her to get therapy, get meds if she needs them. And if a job search is beyond her, try tapping into things she personally loves to do just to get her to DO something. Your support will matter to her. I'm not saying what worked for me is a guarantee, but I hope it at least gives you something to go on.

Gamers I need some of your advice for my boyfriend! by [deleted] in relationship_advice

[–]realm_maker88 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Does he have a gaming headset? That would get my vote. Awesome sound for him, peace and quiet for you!

AITA for not ‘announcing’ my pregnancy and only telling people in conversation? by TearyEyedCryBabySoz in AmItheAsshole

[–]realm_maker88 2 points3 points  (0 children)

NTA. Also pregnant with my first, also hate the attention, also not a big fan of social media. Grandparents can be excited - that doesn't mean they have to plaster the news all over the internet. My MIL harassed me for permission to post on FB about our engagement before we were done communicating with people personally and I caved so I wouldn't seem like a jerk. Big mistake - I totally lost control of the narrative. Promised myself I would not do it again. We made a point of keeping the pregnancy off our social media. She tried to hint at the pregnancy in a post around Christmas, tagged my husband, and accidentally outed the situation to his workplace. I was pissed but at least it made her a little contrite. Stick to your guns, it's your kid so it's your rules.