In my experience in life fairness doesn't exist and you have to deal with life as best you can with the cards you're dealt. The fact that you want to stay with him and help him out makes you an angel, far as I'm concerned but it sounds like you make a lot of excuses for him when you say things like:
she left
him depressed, in therapy, on anti depressants, everything.
She can wear down his patience but she didn't feed him the pills, send him to therapy or make him depressed. It's the result of how he dealt with it.
Sometimes I feel angry with his attitude and I know this is wrong because it's something he can't help and then I end up feeling guilty.
You have limits to your patience too and can't feel guilty for realizing them, even if you don't consider it his fault. He can help it but it is very tough process that requires some self-empowerement, and I doubt the anti-depressants are helping.
He hates his job and wants to lose weight, but he
can't find the motivation to do anything about it. Sometimes, like the last two days, he can't even get out of bed or face going to work. This is worse because he doesn't get paid for taking sick days, and lack of money is another thing that's making him depressed so he's in a
vicious circle.
There is no motivation other than the need to pay rent and eat and unless that fire gets under his ass it won't help him. It sounds like he might be barely towing the line and this is all the motivation he has. The main thing is the concept of it being a vicious circle. A person who is depressed has to stop catering to their depression and start fighting it. The brain will balance itself if given a chance but if you keep wallowing nothing changes.
The individual is the architect of their own outlook and sometimes it takes a real existential challenge to have a person realize that "Hey, there is a steering wheel! I can drive!".
Negative people are masters of excuses, A-Z. Take away the excuses.
The subconcious records everything you say litterally, without accounting for sarcasm, a sense of humor or convenient context. I theorize that absolute words like everybody, never, can't, hate etc. damage a person's outlook little by little unless used where they are appropriate like "water's always wet". I think they already know it as negative self-reinforcement but I believe it is cumulative and as permanent as memory. No damage can be undone but it can be compensated for by positive reinforcement. Nobody can be objective but extremes of emotion certainly don't help keep things in perspective.
Last edited by Disillusioned; 18-09-09 at 04:25 AM.
Precious and fragile things
Need special handling
My god, what have we done to you?