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Yahoo
12 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Woman Considers Ending Her Marriage Over a Bowl of Spaghetti
The woman says it's less about the spaghetti and more about not feeling considered in her relationshipNEED TO KNOW A woman shared that she's considering ending things with her wife over a bowl of spaghetti The woman says it's less about the spaghetti and more about not feeling considered in her relationship People online told her that she needs to communicate with her wifeA bowl of spaghetti may be "the straw that broke the camel's back" for one couple. On Reddit, a 35-year-old woman revealed that she's considering leaving her 34-year-old wife over a not-so-simple pasta dinner. The woman began her post by noting that she and her wife "usually cook separately." While the poster prefers meal prepping so she doesn't have to cook during the week, her wife likes to cook fresh meals every night, as she doesn't like eating the same meal consecutively. "Occasionally, we'll make dinner and eat together, but it's just not often," the Redditor writes. However, before dinner one night, the woman told her wife that she was "going to heat up some frozen fish" and asked if she wanted any, which she did. The poster then went for a 30-minute walk and planned on cooking when she got home, as neither of them was hungry yet. When she came back, she saw her wife was making spaghetti. "She said she was starting to get hungry, so started cooking," she writes. "I just assumed she was making some for both of us, since I was going to make something for her." However, her assumption was incorrect. "She literally made a single plate of spaghetti for just herself," the poster writes. "I don't even know how you do that. Any time I make pasta, I always end up with way more than I thought." Despite feeling "really hurt and uncared for," the poster didn't say anything and convinced herself that she was just "being overdramatic." However, a week has passed, and it's "still bothering" her. "I'm realizing this event is really just a metaphor for our whole relationship," the woman shares. "Stuff like this happens all the time and this is just the straw that broke the camels back." The woman then asked Reddit if she is "being too dramatic" about the situation. Most commenters suggested she may be blowing things out of proportion and encouraged her to communicate with her wife. "That seems annoying, but you're overreacting if it's not part of a pattern of behaviour. Talk to her," one person commented, to which the poster replied, reiterating, "No, it totally is part of a pattern, it's the straw that broke the camel's back kind of thing." Another person wrote, "I think you may be overreacting to the situation, but it sounds like you guys have deeper issues. Maybe try to steer the relationship towards more intimacy and partnership. But if the status quo is you are each responsible for your own food usually and you expressed you wanted fish, left, and she ended up hungry and making herself food. I don't see being upset about it." Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
26 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Photos of the Week: Alligator Dip, Steeplechase Stumble, Friendship Day
The Atlantic Daily, a newsletter that guides you through the biggest stories of the day, helps you discover new ideas, and recommends the best in culture. Sign up for it here. Article originally published at The Atlantic
Yahoo
42 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Man Asks Wife to Stop Sharing Their Arguments with Her Sister and Giving a ‘Front-Row Seat to Every Flaw I Have'
'She said I was 'trying to isolate her' and being controlling,' the husband recalledNEED TO KNOW A Reddit user explained that he would like his wife to keep their private life, including arguments, between the two of them The husband said his sister-in-law 'has been getting a running commentary of our marriage from my wife's side only' His wife said he is ' 'trying to isolate her' and being controlling,' he recalled after he requested her to stopA husband is uncomfortable with his wife's sister seemingly having 'a front-row seat to every flaw' he has in his marriage. The 38-year-old man explained on Reddit's 'Am I the A------' forum that his 35-year-old spouse has been sharing 'basically every argument we have, big or small,' with her sibling whenever he's not around to defend himself. 'We're not constantly fighting or anything, but like any couple, we have our moments — stuff like me forgetting to take out the trash, getting the wrong cereal or spacing out during a conversation,' he wrote. 'Her sister used to be super warm with me, but lately, she's been cold, even passive-aggressive, and it didn't click until I realized she's been getting a running commentary of our marriage from my wife's side only,' he added. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. He then asked his wife to keep their private life between the two of them. 'I wasn't yelling or accusing, just trying to express how it feels to be seen as the 'bad guy' over minor stuff that gets retold out of context,' he said. 'She said I was 'trying to isolate her' and being controlling.' 'To be clear: I don't care if she vents now and then, or leans on her sister during tough times. I just feel like there's a difference between support and giving someone a front-row seat to every flaw I have,' he continued. The husband admitted that he is getting anxious at gatherings for feeling judged by someone — his sister-in-law — who he didn't marry. Pondering if he's being unreasonable, he asked Redditors, 'Am I the a------ for asking her to keep our relationship a little more private?' One reader replied, 'Your wife is weaponizing therapy language here. It's completely reasonable to ask your partner to keep private disagreements private. We all need outside advice now and then, but some privacy in a relationship is also warranted. It's also unfair that your wife was sharing all these presumed-private interactions without you knowing about it.' 'Again, she doesn't need to clear her conversation topics with you, but it feels like she at least should have been upfront with the fact that her sister hears absolutely everything,' the Redditor continued. Another person commented, 'Ask your wife how she would feel if you were relaying every disagreement the two of you have to your family's group chat. Let her know going forward you will not engage with her family ever again while she continues to poison them against you.' Still, a third commenter offered a different perspective. "Generally speaking if someone is happy in their marriage they may vent occasionally about their partner but they don't discuss every single interaction outside the home," they wrote. "If even small things are angering your wife enough that she feels the need to have a running diatribe about you to her sister then she is not happy at all." "It's not wrong to ask for some aspects of your relationship to be private but you should really try to find out why she is so unhappy. Maybe marriage counseling would be a good start," they concluded. Read the original article on People Solve the daily Crossword