It's a
fascinating coincidence that you, despite being her husband and spending a lot of time with your wife, never seem to be around when people say some pretty horrible shit to your wife. I'm not saying your wife is a liar, but I am saying I can give you a pretty good picture of why she might be lying.
Okay, here we go.
Is there anything that I can do?
You can encourage your wife to go into some kind of therapy. This is not me invoking the THERAPY meme, either. She should consider it.
However my wife went with the completely opposite reaction. She thought Jessica was the "alpha bitch" as she put it. Insisting that she was flirting with me and all the guys at the table and giving her "glare downs". Which of course I completely did not notice from her. My wife reacted to this by leaving the game (politely) and locking her and our baby daughter in our room, only venturing out with an excuse to leave the house entirely. I had to wait until after everyone had left to get most of what was going through her mind. She said she felt "horribly uncomfortable in (her) own house".
Can or did you ask the others present if your they felt Jessica was acting in a way different from your impression? Don't prime them with "Did she seem like a bitch," don't even mention you're wondering if they noticed an attitude toward your wife, just ask them how they found Jessica. My feeling is that they will have experienced her not dissimilarly to you.
I'm not saying my wife is wrong about what she sensed/saw. I mean I'm not the most observant person in the world.
Hm, you say that, but:
[of Jessica]She actually is like-minded... She was polite, silly... silent ability of keeping the others from resorting to insulting each other for a laugh.
It looks to me like you are observant, you noticed that she was a good fit for you friends, her demeanour, and even the understated -in fact, '
silent'- talent of hers to promote positive group cohesion. Particularly your ability to notice something that
wasn't happening, that
wasn't there suggests to me you are observant. Although, maybe not the 'most' observant, but obviously you were paying attention to her and the group.
However what concerns me is this is a not a new thing. My wife does this. A lot. She typically makes judgement about someone, and suddenly we are never to see that person again or invite them into our house again. Just a few weeks ago we went to a birthday party for one of our kids' friend's and met some adults who all were gamers. I liked them all immediately. But my wife latched onto some things she didn't like such as one of the guys in particular, and how the women were judging her for being an atheist and "going to hell for getting (her) tubes tied". Again. Nothing I noticed.
As I have now established I think you are someone who does notice things, I am going to take your word over hers. Now, I do not know what kind of crowd you hang out with, but how did it come up in one conversation that your wife is both an atheist, and has had tubal ligation surgery? How did these both come up without you noticing? And, how is it that she met not one, but multiple women who had no problem stating to her face "You are going to hell for getting your tubes tied."?
These seem like strange things to me. Although I'm pleased to talk about my religious beliefs, it seldom comes up in a party setting. Likewise, it may be that someone else mentioned some form of birth control, or that they were considering that surgery or their husband a vasectomy, and she decided to chime in about her experience and choice. Not a common party topic, but to be honest I've had more conversations about birth control methods than my religion at parties.
But for me the weirdest part isn't either of those things, exactly. Now, I am not familiar with every denomination, but I know Catholics reject birth control, however without getting into Catholic doctrine, it definitely doesn't mean you're going to hell (of course there are Catholics or misunderstand or misrepresent things to an extreme). I know many Protestant sects permit birth control, and some reject it, although I don't know exactly which ones and what they believe, doctrinally, about the fate of those who choose to use it.
However I do know that if a given Christian who is bold enough to be bluntly judgmental to someone's face is given the option of telling them they're going to hell because they had their tubes tied, or they're going to hell because they're an atheist...
They're not going to pick the fallopian tubes. They're going to pick the heresy. Why, accepting the idea, that several women were that outwardly rude, would they condemn her for
that but only 'judge' her for being an atheist? That doesn't make sense to me.
And the list of occurrences go on. We met a nice couple in the park once who she nixed because she didn't like the way they were talking to their kid.
I mean, sure you want to avoid a bad parent, but you called them a 'nice couple,' and I said, I am trusting your judgment here. So, hm.
A few of my friends she has nixed because she sensed romantic feelings between the two of us.
That's not healthy.
This is a sentence that is very much worrying to me, because it is something one says when one is exhausted. Are you exhausted with her behaviour? That is bad for the relationship. I'm not saying you
shouldn't be exhausted, I am not telling you to buck up, and keep going for the sake of the relationship, but I am going to tell you that if you are feeling exhausted by your wife's behaviour, then there is something wrong. The exhaustion may cause unhealthiness or even damage in the relationship, but if the
source of the exhaustion is damaging, then it's not how you deal with your exhaustion that matters in this case, it is going to be how to deal the exhausting behaviour.
This is very much why my wife has no friends of her own.
I will get back to this.
And of course she gets upset at me for being insensitive and judgmental of her in these situations. So I can't judge her for being judgmental. Basically.Ironically.
First of all, you do want to avoid judging her, as we should avoid judging everyone. That does not mean you have to ignore reality. In fact, you most definitely should not. I don't know what you say to her that is judgmental, but do consider your language carefully.
This last time I came at her very calmly. I told her that I didn't see the things that she was noticing and that I hoped she would be willing to just see that "being flirtatious" is just part of Jessica's personality and she's probably not even that aware she's doing it to a married man. In fact if she was doing it to everyone then it's honestly probably nothing than just someone being friendly. Some women are just like that.
You put "being flirtatious" in quotes, are those her words, or yours? Do you I
agree that her behaviour was flirtatious? It sounds like you didn't perceive any flirtation directed toward you or anyone, so I'm not sure that we can say that Jessica is flirtatious. If she is, she shouldn't be flirting with a married man, on that point your wife and I agree; but I might expect that Jessica's boyfriend, your (and your wife's? I was unclear) friend, would also be vexed by that behaviour. I suppose some guys don't mind. I don't know.
But, in the same breath, I told her that I would respect her decision if she decided that Jessica would not be allowed to return. It's her house too, and I won't put her into a situation where she is uncomfortable being there.
Wait, but it's okay for you to be uncomfortable in your house? To feel uncomfortable to have company over? Hm.
I certainly wish my wife was not as insecure about herself. She's a very beautiful woman, and has so much to be damn proud of. Sadly my words and encouragement are never enough to make any difference.
I have a suspicion that your wife broadcasts, however unconsciously, the identity of 'I am a victim,' and because of this she cannot be made to 'feel better' for any significant time, because it would conflict with the identity which is extremely important to her sense of self -whether she knows or not. If this sounds like psychobabble, I apologise, but there is truth in the idea that the ego will fight to hang onto its sense of identity over anything, whether that means relationships, money, whatever.
Sadly she's more influenced by the harsh words of her mother, who despite being hated, seems to be the only person she wants to listen to when it comes to critiques about herself.
Her mother is going to have had/continue to have an impact on her life, I mean, sheesh, she's her mom, but it's interesting that she hates her and yet listens to her opinions. Well, it's less interesting if you accept the idea that what your wife really wants to her identity externally validated. It's
less about (though still about) 'I'm not attractive,' and far
more about 'See, mom says I'm ugly.' I'll get back to this.
And her mother, who is possibly bi-polar from what I've seen, has a habit of saying mean things to my wife such as "You're teeth are yellow. I don't even want to talk to you right now cause I'm so disgusted.". Completely out of no where? I agree.
Her mom sounds unpleasant, if this story is true. You seem to doubt the veracity of it:
In fact, based on the issues mentioned above I wonder if such a conversation even happened.
NB: It's entirely possibly her mother is a terrible person whether or not
this story is true.
But, regardless of whether it did or not, the next day my wife bought one of those teeth whitening kits, and a week later I okayed her to get them professionally whitened. Do I think her teeth needed it? Not at all. I thought they were no more stained than mine, and I keep mine in pretty good condition considering.
Something else you noticed.
But it's clear that she's just going to continue hating everything about herself.
Alright, I have a question that I want you to answer here. I'm very curious.
Does your wife hate everything about herself? How does your wife feel about herself? What does she say about herself?
Here's what I know about your wife: she believes Jessica is a bitch, she believes some random mothers at a birthday party hate her, she believes your friends flirt with you -and by extension, she believes that they do not like her, she believes
her mother believes her teeth are yellow.
You've never reported her saying, "I'm bad at socialising," or "I don't know how to get along with other moms," or "I hate my teeth," or "I'm ugly," or anything about herself. She is repeatedly saying other people don't like her. Other people are at fault for how she feels. Other people make her unable to play a board game. Other people make her unable to go to a party. Other people make her whiten her teeth.
It's not
her. No! It's
these awful people.
This is very much why my wife has no friends of her own.
I said I'd get back to this, I wanted to include this:
And sadly it looks like it's having a secondary effect of keeping us from making any new friends.
First you said your wife doesn't have any friends (and this is after mentioning you 'can't see' some of
your own friends) and now you're saying you can't even make new friends as a couple. Even with couples!
I bet your wife trusts you not to cheat on her, I think if you straight up asked her, she would say it's not you she's worried about, it's those flirtatious girls -as though it doesn't take two to tango, but whatever.
I will repeat again that your wife sees herself as a victim, and again I will say it is possibly -I think even likely- that this identity is unconscious, but deeply rooted.
The reason she doesn't have friends, and you can't make friends as a couple is because then she isn't a victim. A victim can't have friends! Then there'd be people to help her! I'll even suspect that no matter how you broach this topic with her, she will accuse you of 'siding' with 'them.'
You will say, "I think it's a good idea for us to invite Jessica and <friend> over again. Board games were really fun."
And she'll say, "So, you think it's okay for girls to flirt with married men?" Because she needs to externally validate her victim status. If it isn't Jessica, it will be yellow teeth, and if it isn't teeth, it will be weight, and if it isn't weight, it will be those mean kids at school who don't like me, nobody likes me, why doesn't anybody like me.
And so she'll run away, grab her kid as an excuse, and make no mistake, she was
using your daughter as an excuse that night, and everyone will notice that. She won't feel embarrassed, or wrong, that a grown woman couldn't sit at a table with someone she didn't really care for: she'll feel
right. It wasn't her fault she left,
they were mean to her, in her mind, they drove her out. They didn't want her there anyway.
People are saying your wife is insecure, and she probably is, but that's not the core problem here. She sees everything from her point of view, and according to her narrative, no one likes her. If someone likes her, she makes goddamn sure she never finds out about it, even to the point of 'seeing' people glare at her. Hm.