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My husbands terrible mood swings

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1
Type of diabetes
Carer
Treatment type
I do not have diabetes
My husband has been diabetic (type 1) for around 20 years. We have been together for 22.

He’s always had the potential to be short tempered but this last week he has been terrible. He is Ill and his blood sugar isn’t controlled.
How do I address this?

When he’s been like this before he will say yes I’m diabetic it can affect my moods, you should know this! And he can never say sorry.
He’s even been saying things about selling out assets and splitting the money but there’s not even been a particular argument.

To be honest at this point it would be easier to let him go but most of the time the relationship is good.
 
My husband has been diabetic (type 1) for around 20 years. We have been together for 22.

He’s always had the potential to be short tempered but this last week he has been terrible. He is Ill and his blood sugar isn’t controlled.
How do I address this?

When he’s been like this before he will say yes I’m diabetic it can affect my moods, you should know this! And he can never say sorry.
He’s even been saying things about selling out assets and splitting the money but there’s not even been a particular argument.

To be honest at this point it would be easier to let him go but most of the time the relationship is good.
Okay, so.... Most of the time things are good, but sometimes he's basically making excuses to be an as*h*le to you? That's putting it extremely bluntly, but...

Big backstory. I'm a T2 diabetic, and yes, being uncontrolled made me into a fire breathing dragon, until I got a grip on my blood sugars. I also went misdiagnosed with borderline personality disorder, which turned out to be ADHD with resulting social and general anxiety, severe depression and suicidal tendencies. That, too, makes me particularly hard to live with, as it is taking a very long time for me to get help. (Current waiting list for psychiatric care is 58 weeks, but hoping to change that when I switch insurers. Hopefully then it'll be a month or two into the new year. I don't care about me, I want to be better for him. Same reason I tackled my diabetes: to make his life easier.). On top of all that I lost my mom last March, and some days are harder than others. I have a lot of reasons why I can be an absolute hag to my husband. I know it, and I know it when I'm doing it. And I'm not going to tell him it's because of blood sugars, the ADHD, grieving my mom, or whatever else I can come up with, and he should understand, grin, and eat whatever sh*t I serve, making it his problem instead. That's gaslighting, and I had enough of that from my dad, growing up, to know better. What I do do, right when something nasty has left my mouth, is say that I am sorry, -not a rote thing, but truly and deeply- that it's me, not him, why I am reacting the way I am and that I love him, don't mean anything I've said, and then we work through whatever needs to be worked through, if anything. We talk. And I own my behaviour. Knowing where it comes from helps, yeah, but that's no reason to lay responsibility for it at the feet of the other. I know my husband: he will think whatever I say means the fault lies with him, he'll shut down just mulling over everything he might've done wrong, possibly for days, when that's not the issue, and it just isn't true. I'm the problem, and I am not going to make him feel like he did anything, when all he's ever been is supportive and loving.

This isn't something you deserve. To be treated like that. When we (diabetics and/or the generally short-fused) are mean to people, we bl**dy well know it. If he's ill he's more likely to be high than low, so cognitive function should still be alright, so can't blame it on not knowing what he's doing... I know, he's ill and thus uncontrolled for a week, but it sounds like this has been a long, ongoing issue for years. Maybe startle him some and agree to divvy up the assets? Maybe that'll wake him up. And if it doesn't... Maybe starting over on your own, wouldn't be such a bad thing after all.

So... Time to ask yourself some questions: Is this someone you can reason with when his blood sugars are back under control and you can tell him how this is affecting you? The lack of sincere apologies adding insult to injury? Would he love and respect you enough to listen? Is this a situation you want to remain in? Because like you said, most of the time it's good. Is it good enough to hang in there? In every relationship, sacrifices are made, and only you know how far you want to go with those, and whether or not your marriage is worth making more of them for. We can't look into your homelife from a single post. There's more sides to the story, this is a bad patch, etc, etc. So we can advise whatever we want, but none of us here knows what's really going on, how deep some things go. Is a short fuse "just" a tendency to make scathing remarks, or does it escalate to physical or mental abuse? All I do know.... Sometimes you have to really think about whether a certain situation is good for you, and if not, whether it's likely to change any time soon.

You are allowed to choose you. If not obligated, even. Do whatever you need to do to get to a good place again. With, or without him. But if you can talk, and delve into these things, do. So you know you did everything possible and don't get stuck second-guessing yourself, with whatever descisions you make.

Hugs,
Jo, the she-dragon.
 
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Bravo @JoKalsbeek ...bravo.

What a marvelous reply.

Huge hugs for the raw openness, honesty & way you have tackled some issues that would overwhelm & defeat many others...(heart)

But my goodness, what sense you make.
Such clarity & to my mind, getting right to the core issues.


This forums a wonderful place @BelleSheffield , with a glorious variety of worldly experience, freely shared in many of the replies, usually with love to help & assist others, who may benefit or find comfort in them.

While the members can't always fix every issue, the pearls of wisdom & simply knowing others care, are beyond Gold at times.

I think @JoKalsbeek has just expressed it far better than I or many others could ever hope to achieve.

I hope some of her post helps you in some small way towards a better life with (or without, if that is what it takes & leads to, sadly ) your partner.

All of us deserve the best from those we give so much to.

We truly are 'Worth it'

Best wishes.
 
Hi @BelleSheffield,

A Google search brought up your post and I can completely identify with this. My husband is Type 1 diabetic and has been ever since he was a child. He generally manages it very well and I understand it's not an easy condition to manage, but I find his words and actions hurtful when his blood sugar drops low and I rarely ever get a 'sorry for how I spoke to you when my blood sugar was low'. It seems to be expected that I just deal with it because I'm not the one who's diabetic, which makes me feel bad for feeling hurt about how he's spoken to me etc. We have two young children, which can be an added stressor to the situation but sometimes when he's low, he can even snap and shout at our six-year-old son (which he did a short while ago) in an un-called for way. I'm not really sure why I am posting, other than I am finding it tough right now.
 
I have not had a severe hypo for maybe 20 years but one thing I do remember is that I could not remember anything about it when I came round and could only put small pieces together when my wife told me some of the unpleasant things I had said to her , so it could be your partners aren't apologising because they aren't aware of how unpleasant they have been .
 
Hi @BelleSheffield,

A Google search brought up your post and I can completely identify with this. My husband is Type 1 diabetic and has been ever since he was a child. He generally manages it very well and I understand it's not an easy condition to manage, but I find his words and actions hurtful when his blood sugar drops low and I rarely ever get a 'sorry for how I spoke to you when my blood sugar was low'. It seems to be expected that I just deal with it because I'm not the one who's diabetic, which makes me feel bad for feeling hurt about how he's spoken to me etc. We have two young children, which can be an added stressor to the situation but sometimes when he's low, he can even snap and shout at our six-year-old son (which he did a short while ago) in an un-called for way. I'm not really sure why I am posting, other than I am finding it tough right now.
The first thing I thought of was what @jaywak said: He might not actually know what he said. When you're low, good and proper, your brain tends to malfunction, bringing about personality changes, yes, (aggressiveness, paranoia being examples) but it can also just short circuit memory as well. It's not an excuse, mind you: if he knows what was said, then an apology and then some, should be forthcoming. But he might not have a clue, especially if the things he says are very out of character for him. He might not believe he's said what was said, because it's not actually how he feels about either one of you. With a hyper, I remember very well what I'm doing, that's quite different. With a hypo, especially a rather deep one, all bets in regards to memory or reactions, no matter what type of diabetes one has, are off.

Time for a good chat with him, maybe...?
Hugs,
Jo
 
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