Husbands, stop me if you’re familiar with this situation: you come to home from work, and your wife is stressed, angry, or irritable. “What’s her problem?” you wonder to yourself, “I wish she would just ‘calm down‘ and relax.”
According to Samantha Rodman PhD, clinical psychologist, author, and Drpsychmom.com founder believes that it isn’t easy for your wife to just “calm down”. In fact, if it was that easy, she’d be out of a job!
So what’s causing your wife so much stress? And why can’t she just “calm down”?
Luckily for you, husbands, Dr. Rodman recently shared 7 reasons your wife is so stressed out all the time. Check them out here and learn more about why your wife can’t just relax or take it easy. You’ll be surprised to see just how much your wife has going on. More importantly, you’ll learn how to help relieve some of the stress in her busy life!
Here’s the list according to Dr. Rodman:
1. Women are judged differently than men are
If your kid is wearing mismatched clothes and has pen on his face, and you bring him to school, everyone is like, “Awww! Dad did such a good job!” This is something that involved dads actually find kind of insulting. But if a mom brings a kid into school looking a mess, the teachers, the other parents, and anyone else within a mile radius is thinking, “Hmm, is she a closet alcoholic or something? Poor kid.”
2. Judgment matters
It’s all well and good to say, “I don’t care what people think about me!” when you’re flashing your boobs at Mardi Gras at age 22. It’s actually fine to say that as long as you’re not a parent. But here is the thing: children deserve not to start out with the deck stacked against them because they don’t fit in, they are always late, their lunch is a crappy lunch that the other kids look at with disgust, they wear unwashed clothes, and so forth. As I frequently mention, we are evolutionarily designed to be group mammals. Mammals need to fit in or they get ostracized and left for dead. Anyone who has been through junior high knows this is not just applicable to meerkats. So, as independent and creative as you hope that little Madison is, your wife knows that if she shows up to preschool after show and tell already happened with a Dunkin Donut for lunch and knots in her hair, the other kids are not going to want a playdate with her. There is a lot of stuff that has to happen behind the scenes for your kid to reach the baseline level of fitting in that will give him or her the confidence needed to one day decide that fitting in isn’t important. (If you don’t fit in as a kid, you’re going to be consumed with fitting in as a grownup. If you fit in just fine, then you have the confidence to think outside the box.) And your wife is probably in charge of everything that helps your kid look, act, and feel relatively normative, which is stressful.
3. Women are often more intuitive than men
You can be like, “Oh, my mom doesn’t care if we’re 15 minutes late to lunch!” And your wife, since she is more sensitive and perceptive to the nuances of your mother’s nasty faces — I mean, expressions — will be like, “Get the hell in the car now so I don’t have to deal with a guilt trip for the next five months.” And you know who’s right? Your wife. Unless you want to have the discussion with your mom about her guilt trips. I didn’t think so.
4. Women need more sleep than men
I love this finding. And women are also most often the ones who are up with the kids in the middle of the night. So your wife has a sleep deficit, so she’s more easily stressed out. If you want a less stressed wife, get up with the kids.
5. Women know that housework matters
6. Your wife wants to feel heard
Wife: God, we are going to be late. You: It’s not that big a deal. Wife: Yes, it is. We’re still going to have to park and stuff too. You: Parking is no problem. Wife: STREET PARKING IS A PROBLEM! THEN WE HAVE TO PACK UP THE STROLLERS! WE ARE GOING TO BE SO LATE! You: Street parking is easy. I can load the strollers in a couple seconds. We don’t even need strollers, really. Wife: WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU TALKING ABOUT???? WE HAVE TO LEAVE RIGHT THIS SECOND!!! WHY AM I ALWAYS THE ONLY ONE WHO KNOWS WHAT WE NEED TO DO???? You: Can you just chill out? Wife: (Sleeps with your best friend in her mind).
Instead of this horrible dynamic, try to meet your wife where she is in her anxiety and stress. And, like a magic trick, she will actually get less stressed! I am not kidding. It will likely go like this:
Wife: God, we are going to be late. You: HOLY CRAP, look at the time! We are still going to have to unload the kids and pack up the strollers too! I should have started putting the kids in the car like 10 minutes ago! This sucks. Wife: Um… well, it’s okay. Don’t worry. You: I hate when we’re all stressed because we’re late! Wife: It’s okay. Let’s just hope there’s parking. You: (Astounded and my latest convert to the benefit of joining your wife in her emotions) Okay.
7. Your wife is Type A, and that’s partly why you married her
Save me your story about how she used to flash you in the Victoria’s Secret dressing room when you dated her so you thought she was spontaneity incarnate. There were plenty of indicators that she was extremely organized, like perhaps at her job, or that she was always throwing someone a perfectly planned birthday party, or that she tries her best at everything she does (like flashing you in the Victoria’s Secret dressing room, or purchasing lingerie in the first place). And part of you liked this attention to detail, and to YOU.
Men who marry women who they later complain are too rigid and perfectionistic usually come from childhoods where nobody really had a laser-like focus on anything, especially not them. At the beginning, and at many points throughout the marriage, your wife’s focus and detail-oriented nature makes you feel loved and confident that the kids, the house, and your lives in general are under control. So, you take the good with the bad. The same woman who wants to be five minutes early for everything is going to plan you an awesome surprise 40th birthday party and take care of you excellently when you’re sick, and your kids are never going to be the last ones picked up from practice or the ones whose mom forgot the field trip money.
You can learn more helpful advice from Dr. Rodman by visiting her website, Drpsychmom.com. Be sure to follow her on Facebook and Twitter (Twitter@DrPsychMom).