As a side note, the reason this usually happens at night is because that's typically when he has free time with his 55+hr job. However, it is extremely stressful for me to be worrying about what he's doing out at 4am without him sending me messages about what is going on. Last night I told him I was stressed and worried because he wasn't telling me why he was out so late. His replies we're just "It's not that," and "Stahp!" (aka. stop, in a more joking manner), and even "Calm the f*** down." Just, wow.
Now, I realise I have a different opinion than some people here, but I don't believe that you have the right to demand a text or a phone call from your SO while they're out. I never have, and it's never a standard I will hold any of my future partners to. The thing is, it is sometimes difficult to shoot off the text, depending on what you're doing and with whom, and this is especially true for when the text is obligatory. For example, I remember when my ex first learned his mother was dying, I was at a concert with my sister. I made time for him and would do it again in a heartbeat, but there were other occasions where the need was less immediate that I was either at a festival or some sort of event or even at salsa dancing where being out and present and also sending off a text or phone call to my ex conflicted with one another. In all cases, I would have had to remove myself completely and that's no easier to do when you're out with friends than when at an event. It also sounds like both times he told you where he was/that he would be home later and why? To me that's courteous and all that should be asked for, him letting you know when there's a change of plans.
If you want to stop this arguing that seems to have been off and on (if not a solid on) for months now, then I think you both need to change your approaches. He's given up because your expectations are too high. In the last couple posts I have read, it sounds like you're demanding from him what he cannot provide. He doesn't want to continue trying when all he does is fail and that seems to be what's happening. The expectations are ones he can't meet, so if you were me, personally, this is when I'd consider breaking up. The problem has been a consistent one since at least September and nothing's changing because neither of you seem willing to bend on what your expectations are for a relationship. I don't need a text or phone call when I know my partner is going to be out or away all night. I trusted my ex enough to know he would be busy, partying with his friends, and he would talk with me in the morning. Some people are not like that. Some people want a conversation anyway. It doesn't make one right and the other wrong, but it does sometimes make two people unable to see the others' viewpoint and those same two people might be unwilling to compromise. He's made it clear that he's not going to call you when he's out late; he already lets you know when he's coming home later than expected. Can you trust him enough to live with this? Can you handle how it makes you feel in terms of your relationship? If not, then maybe that's a hard limit for you, I don't know. All I can say is that I feel like this entire relationship is you demanding things from him that he can't/won't provide and then feeling upset or hurt when he doesn't provide it; consequently, he's stopped putting in effort because he's become defeated about the fact what he does never seems to be good enough and therefore is preferring to spend time with friends, who are there, and not deal with what he feels won't pay off, hence the arguing. That is how it looks from my outsider's perspective. It's worth considering, in any case.
ETA: I don't know where I stand on his being out so late with female friends. I have been in situations like this where there really was nothing going on and I would hate my ex not to have trusted me (or for any of my future partners to be insecure and not trust me, either), but there have been other situations I've seen this in and it hasn't ended up as an honest situation.
Comment