What do you mean by “a**hole”? – an interlude

After my last post about my husband’s journey to rehab, a newer reader asked me what exactly I meant when I said that my husband was being an a**hole pre-rehab. It’s a good and fair question, because the answer may not be what you might imagine.

Handsome does a lot of things right. He diligently attends marriage counseling. He diligently attends individual therapy twice a week. He goes to 12-step meetings at least once a week. He’s not the guy who denies he’s a sex addict or one who tries to gaslight others about his addiction despite being caught red handed.

He has sought out therapeutic intensives for him and for us as a couple and by all accounts he was cooperative and participated fully and appeared motivated to put what he learned to good use.

He is an involved and caring father. He has tried, with varying degrees of effort and success, to be empathetic towards me and to support me.

All of that is wonderful. And yet this is also a guy who could lose his mind over me taking too long to pick out ice cream at the grocery store. Or shut down and accuse me of having control issues if I ask him a reasonably simple question about our family scheduling. Or reduce both of our kids to tears for no good reason within an hour of them getting off the school bus. On the surface he presents as reasonably fine, but right beneath the surface is a maelstrom. That’s the anger aspect of his a**holery.

There is also a liar, liar aspect. Like many addicts, Handsome is an accomplished liar. As a child, he learned to lie to prevent harm and neglect from his two functionally alcoholic parents, and he honed those skills through his lifetime of addiction. He has been working on regaining his integrity, but there are still times where he lies to me for no apparent reason (in addition to the times he still lies purely for self-preservation purposes). For example, if asked, he might tell me that he talked to his best friend and he might go so far as to tell me something they talked about. Then I’d get a call from that same friend a day or so later asking how Handsome was doing since they hadn’t spoken in weeks. Why the lie? I don’t really care if he spoke to his friend, I was just making conversation. Knowing that he lied, however, is a big deal to me when he’s supposed to be reestablishing his integrity.

Last, there is a distorted reality aspect to his a**holery. For me, this is actually the hardest to deal with because I am so often cast as the enemy in his distortions. Frustratingly, when he’s living inside the distortion, I can’t talk him out of it. Usually our CSAT can, but I cannot. I’m viewed as an untrustworthy enemy in those moments. I offer two examples:

1. Handsome and I both have slightly warped senses of humor. We often laugh about some dark stuff. After he returned home from the hospital following his emergency surgery he was in dire need of a shower. Knowing that soap was likely to sting in his fresh wounds I jokingly said “Hey, watch out for the soap!” (As in “wow, I feel for you because that’s really going to suck…”) He chuckled along with me, as usual, and that was that, I thought. It wasn’t though. He repeated the interaction throughout that day and the next and in each telling my few joking words were painted as increasingly sinister and mean. I literally watched this happen before my eyes. By the time several days passed and we showed up for our weekly CSAT appointment, he told her the story as if I had actually wished him harm. He wasn’t lying or trying to be manipulative in that moment. He had fully convinced himself that I wanted him to be in pain. (How awful that must be to believe your spouse wished you harm?? To talk yourself into a scenario where you can’t tell what’s real?)

And another example…

2. Handsome and I had an argument about something – I don’t recall exactly what – but the argument was heated. It was a good ole’ fashioned argument, but there was no screaming or swearing or name calling. None. And yet he convinced himself that I called him a f**k up. I have never called him that. Ever. (And, let’s be honest, there have been times these last two years where that wouldn’t have been entirely unreasonable.) It has always seemed to me like one of those things that if I said it I would never be able to take it back or apologize enough or make it better, so I have never said those words to him. In his mind, however, he took my displeasure, frustration, and anger that I did express during our discussion and boiled it down to “She called me a f**k up.” Then, he used that as an excuse to shut down all communication for 3 days. He rationalized his withdrawal by inventing an incident that really didn’t occur. It’s kind of like how he used my failure to attend his mom’s funeral as some of the justification for his acting out. (“She doesn’t love me, because if she did she would be here, so she abandoned me.”) Except, I WAS AT THE FUNERAL.

When I write these things down, I know my husband sounds bonkers. I completely understand how absurd these things must be to those who haven’t lived it. And yet I’ve now had over a half dozen different, unrelated therapists tell me that these actions are all indicia of various mood disorders which are all in turn tied to Handsome’s childhood trauma. Does he get to rage, lie and distort just because he had crappy parents? No, he doesn’t. What he gets is to go off to rehab for several weeks to: (1) learn the emotional regulation skills he never learned as a kid, (2) get him on the right medications and on the right dosages that can help him, and (3) dig deep into his family of origin traumas to try to address them.

12 thoughts on “What do you mean by “a**hole”? – an interlude”

  1. Actually, I think to those of us who have been there, on either side of the equation, you don’t sound bonkers at all. Your post made me reflect on my life which is now rooted in truth and how much easier and less stressful it is. I actually think hiding the truth with lies was the worst part about the addiction. I still find myself six years into recovery having knee-jerk reactions. Like the other day my wife needed to use my phone and I immediately worried what she’d fine. Then it dawned on me, “there hasn’t been anything on there you’d need to hide in years” and I just gave her my phone, but that’s how ingrained the lies and the deceit gets. It became part of it and I still have twinges of it, like a natural spasm. Looking forward to more of the rehab story.

    1. Ingrained is a great word for it. These behaviors have been a part of my husband’s life for decades. Breaking that chain reaction of discomfort-> anger/ lie/ distort is not going to happen overnight even if he truly wishes that it would.

      1. And the abandonment issues seem to be a common thread too. I’ve heard it from so many other women in our situations.

        Who *really* abandoned the marriage? The betrayer. That person is the one who abandoned the vows – the betrayer didn’t love, honor (incl truth), and cherish the other – forsaking all others (digital or in real life). It’s cheating/betrayal/taking sexual energy and love – part of the marriage bond – away from the spouse and breaking vows.

        They abandon us, but blame us for abandonment? I know. It doesn’t make sense. If I didn’t love my husband, and I didn’t truly care for his well-being, I could have abandoned him in his time of need when my instincts were on hyper-alert (suicide risk). And he’d be dead. Horrible!

        That’s just not my character. I guess my husband chose me well.

        1. I often like we were all chosen well. And it really ticks me off. I was honest in my presentation of myself. My husband got exactly what he bargained for. I was deceived and presented with a largely false set of pretenses. It sucks all the way around.
          Xo

          1. They are (perhaps?) unconsciously choosing someone who is safe, sound, strong, and a good partner b/c they long for the stability and love. We can affirm ourselves that we are good people. (((hugs)))

  2. Re: “When I write these things down, I know my husband sounds bonkers. … get him on the right medications and on the right dosages that can help him…”

    I have felt the same way, and admittedly, I feel some shame around this. My husband really did lose it. I never even thought this was possible – Mr. Doc Calm, Cool, Handles Emergencies.

    Severe Major Depressive breakdown with a Psychotic Break (and that’s when he almost succeeded at killing himself). He was in the psych hospital 2 weeks prior to his near-lethal attempt (he called 911 for himself saying he was suicidal and needed help) and the psychiatrist was inept. Sent him home while he was hallucinating. I was so frozen in trauma, I let him come home. She had him on the wrong meds, meds don’t become fully effective in that short of a time, and he wasn’t stable. It took over a year to get him stabilized on the proper meds (tweaking) and therapy – but he’s got a LONG way to go with therapy.

    Sorry I am responding so much. I can relate to what you are talking about BA! <3

    1. There is so much commonality between our various stories. It is really hitting me in the last few months that even things I thought were so very different about our story may only have appeared different in that moment in time. Like Kat saying that her husband’s addiction grounded him. It made no sense at the time but having been through several months of ungrounded behavior now I completely get it.

    1. Patience is not really big in my day to day wheelhouse, but this experience has given me plenty of opportunity to practice it.

Please share if you've had a similar (or totally different) experience on your journey.