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cover of episode 🎤 PODCAST • Lazy Husband ~ Husband does not help around the house.

🎤 PODCAST • Lazy Husband ~ Husband does not help around the house.

2025/6/23
logo of podcast www.drkenner.com Answers Your Questions

www.drkenner.com Answers Your Questions

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Ellen Kenner
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Irene
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Irene: 我目前面临的困境是,丈夫退休后变得不合作,对家庭事务漠不关心,甚至酗酒。这不仅影响了我的生活和健康,也影响了我的工作和孩子。我感到非常沮丧和疲惫,开始怀疑是否应该结束这段婚姻。我担心离婚会对孩子造成负面影响,但现在孩子们也开始对父亲感到不满。我不知道该如何解决这个问题,是应该继续忍受,还是应该为了自己的幸福而选择离开?我希望能够找到一个让自己快乐的解决方案。 Ellen Kenner: 面对你丈夫的问题,你无法改变他,所以最重要的是关注自己的幸福。我建议你寻求心理治疗的支持,并认真思考什么会让你长期快乐。如果离开他会让你更快乐,那就应该为自己做出选择。你的孩子已经长大,他们会理解并支持你的决定。同时,你也可以考虑告诉同事你的情况,他们会更理解和支持你。此外,如果经济条件允许,可以考虑辅助生活,这既能维护你年迈父母的尊严,又能保护你自己的隐私。逃避型伴侣会使用防御行为来伪装自尊,比如长期酗酒和吸毒来减轻焦虑。另一种防御行为是身体上的攻击,以对那些威胁你虚假自尊的人施加权力。社交退缩是为了逃避与他人交往的焦虑,但这只会加剧你的无能感。

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The Selfish Path to Romance. Download Chapter 1 for free at drkenner.com and at amazon.com. Irene? Yes. Yes, welcome to the show. Hi, Dr. Kenner. I'm, like you said, my name is Irene. And I'm in a situation that I, like I was telling the young gentleman earlier, I have a 21-year-old daughter, a 22-year-old son, a husband, and a home. Okay. Of course. But I'm in a situation that

Since my husband retired or even prior to that, six years earlier, seven years earlier, he does not cooperate with anything around the house. He does not cooperate for anything at all. Give me one example that irks the heck out of you. You know why I'm calling you actually this morning? Because I've got water leak faucets in all the bathrooms.

Outside, front yard, backyard, everywhere. Water leaking. Yes. And then I simply asked him, I got my brother to come and help me do the plumbing. Of course, plumbing is expensive. Yeah. So I asked him, have you noticed if the backyard towards the very far end is leaking? And the answer that irritates me is that he snaps.

What does he say? Yeah, how old is he?

He is 63. 63. Very healthy, very strong. Healthy and strong. What does he do for hobbies besides watch TV? Drink beer and liquor. Okay. He's an alcoholic? I would think so. Okay. What keeps you with him? Me, myself, have judged him to be like that. How much does he drink? Well, um...

When I get home, I see at least about a dozen cans of beer. A dozen cans of beer? Uh-huh. And I get up, I'm sick.

I'm in the verge of leukemia. I have a blood problem. Okay. And I get up and I drag myself to work still. Okay? My daughter drags herself to work and studies, goes to college. What do you do? I work in an office. I'm an office clerk. Okay. Do you have a good friend in the office? Actually, no, because I think that my problem here at the house shows on me at work. How so? It seems like...

It seems like when I snap at some of the girls at the office also, when they ask questions about something that they should know, they've been there for such a long period of time also. And I think that my...

So it spills over. You're frustrated. His problem is reflecting on me. Okay. What keeps you in the marriage? Hey, I got to interrupt this because we've got to pay some bills. 30 seconds. That's it. A very quick ad and then Ellen will be back.

Many romantic partners have complaints like, I live in the shadow of my husband's life, or I feel invisible to my girlfriend. These are common complaints, but you never want to betray yourself in a romantic partnership. When both partners value themselves and are lovingly honest with one another, romance flourishes. Discover the secrets to lasting love in this liberating book, The Selfish Path to Romance.

by Drs. Edwin Locke and Ellen Kenner. That's The Selfish Path to Romance on Amazon or SelfishRomance.com. What keeps you in the marriage? The leukemia? At the beginning, no. At the beginning, what kept me in the marriage was that...

My sister had gotten divorced. Yeah. And her children always threw this thing back at her, like, oh, you left my dad because you want to go around running around looking for a husband. We don't want a new dad. How old were her kids when she divorced? About 13, 14. And how old... Your kids are 21 and 22. My kids are old now. And I was thinking of maybe...

Is he too old or am I too old to get a divorce? Oh, do you know that there are articles and...

Okay, he wants a free ride in life. What did he do for a living? He used to work at a company manufacturing appliances. Was he in like a corporate? Did he use his brain a lot or was he just somebody who was a gopher and he was a day laborer? He was a worker, just a worker, and the company moved out to another place.

Okay, but was he a hard worker? Was he a good worker? Very hard worker. Did he love his work? Yes, he did. Okay, one of the problems, but you said this started before he left work, too. So I'm hearing at least two major problems. One is his alcoholism, which may be his way of drowning the fact that he's let his mind corrode.

He's not functioning. He's not building any self-respect. And therefore, he's hateful of himself. And it sounds like he's reflecting it out on you. And then you bring it into work, so it's like this domino effect. And it's not just on me. It's on the kids, my son and my daughter. Oh, he does it with them, too. Well, because... Why... Yeah. I feel that it's stupid because when you hear one of your children say, Oh, I hate my...

My father? Mm-hmm. Okay, well, that's wonderful in a sense because they're recognizing reality. How can you love someone who hates themselves? If they hate themselves and they've made themselves into a bad character, they're drinking, they're throwing what could have been a wonderful life away. He could have made the most of retirement. He's not. He's just watching TV and basically stagnating. There's a stench in that room, the alcohol stench.

What I recommend is you asking yourself the question. You can't change him. I would get therapy for yourself, supportive therapy. Mm-hmm. And I would ask yourself, what will make you happy long range? And if it's living without him, make sure you can do it financially. Mm-hmm.

Make sure you can, maybe you can find a darling little apartment. I've worked with women who've been married for many decades, and I've just seen them so much happier on their own. There's a transition period that's sticky, but your kids will be supportive of you because it's not like your sister. Your kids are on your side. Right.

Right. And you'll be better to the people at work. You can even tell the people at work what's going on. They'll be more empathetic, and maybe you'll soften up there and make your life a little better. So here, thank you so much for your call. I wish we had more time. We're right up against the break, Irene. I see. Okay, I really appreciate your help here. Okay, hope that helps. Give me a call back. Let me know how it turns out for you. And here's a little more from Dr. Kenner.

This last week with that, it's been a living hell. When I'm there, I feel like my territory is being violated. When I'm not, I'm worried about what he's up to. Look at me. I'm a nervous wreck. You don't still have the brochures from those...

Okay, that's from Frasier. And so many people that I work with now are in that situation where they've got...

elderly parents moving back in with them or living with them anyway or in an in-law apartment attached to the house. And they constantly are shuttling them around, taking them to doctors, taking them to the church social, taking them everywhere you can imagine. And the parents, the sandwich generation, actually not the parents, the kids,

of these parents, the adult kids, just feel like they have no life anymore. And of course, that's what Frasier's dealing with. And typically, it doesn't end up like with Frasier. Typically, resentments build between the adult child and the parent. And it comes out in screaming at one another or passive-aggressive actions. The parent feels like a burden if they're a good parent and they feel like

If they're an envious parent that just feels that the child owes them this, then it becomes a nightmare and the child can't disentangle herself from this.

So, what's the solution? Well, you're pouring it off on your younger sibling or your older brother or somebody else in the family. That's not a solution. That's just a passing the buck. I think the most respectful thing in this situation is to seriously look into assisted living if you're in the price category where you can afford it.

because it preserves the dignity of the aging parent and yourself. And you each have your privacy. It's just a much healthier solution. You may feel differently, but that's the route that we went with my mother-in-law, and it gave her a lot of privacy, and it worked out very well. Of course, if you have a loving parent and you've got young kids and the parent wants to babysit for the kids,

and it's a win-win situation, then that's a whole different category. For more Dr. Kenner podcasts, go to drkenner.com and please listen to this ad. Here's an excerpt from The Selfish Path to Romance, The Serious Romance Guidebook by clinical psychologist Dr. Ellen Kenner.

A partner to avoid is someone who tries to fake their self-esteem by using defensive actions. A prime example is the chronic use of alcohol and drugs to reduce anxiety. Getting high temporarily blurs the pain and may even yield the illusion of pleasure. But such jolts lack the quality of pleasure based on actual achievements and do not lead to action that would remove the real cause of the pain.

Another example of defensive action is lashing out physically in order to exert power over those who threaten your fake self-esteem. Social withdrawal in order to escape the anxiety of dealing with other people is another defensive action. Withdrawing into a shell simply reinforces your feelings of inadequacy. You can download Chapter 1 for free by going to drkenner.com. And you can buy the book at Amazon.com.