Hello, Thinx, good to meet you!
Nearly missed this post as it came in a cluster!
As he doesn't want or feel able to do any investigating of himself, could you think instead about how you could handle things differently, in terms of keeping yourself feeling OK without him being able/willing to change?
Yes, that's one thing I'm definitely doing, and yesterday I thought, "I need to be able to talk to other people who get it, and aren't going to have prejudice regarding that stuff, about this when my anxiety ramps up, so that I'm supported socially in this, which reduces pressure on me and therefore also on him." That's why I signed up. That was one thing I could do, and the other is to find other strategies for communicating about it with him, etc.
Some people who have been made pretty insecure by their backgrounds hear criticism in even constructive feedback, but working on yourself and your own inner security as an adult can help you keep an even keel despite his reactions. Sounds like you have done lots of work on yourself already.
My own stuff is a work in progress, and when it intersects with his, will always give me more work to do on that stuff. But I'm miles from where I was 20 years ago. And I think the background insecurity is a definite issue for my husband. He wasn't really celebrated for who he was, growing up, and I think a lot of people here probably can relate to that. I can, for my own particular set of reasons, too.
I think he tries to block out his painful past experiences growing up - he doesn't want to remember them, it makes him miserable and he feels helpless. Merely to contemplate his past seems to make his self-esteem dive rapidly. (But of course, some of the meltdown triggers are intimately linked to those experiences.)
But he thrived, and I thrived, in our mutual relationship, because we are both to a great extent celebrated and loved for who we are, and because the things some people seem to think of as annoying quirks - such as preferring to write (me) or programme (him) recreationally instead of drink beer and watch the football or imbibe B-grade soap opera - we highly value in each other. (ETA - one of his recreational projects has been to create a faux-Latin-botanical-name generator that comes up with fake but realistic-sounding binomial names for imaginary plants - it's such a fun quirky project!
)
We can talk to each other about pretty much anything that interests the other, and there's this nice Venn diagram of shared versus individual interests, where the shared stuff gives you common ground and the individual interests are a source of intrigue and learning about new things for each other, and appreciating perspectives we've not explored before. We're not carbon copies (...if two people were exactly alike, one of them would be redundant
) and the exchange we have, and have had for 15 years now, has led to enormous personal and intellectual growth, not to mention fun and adventures, for both of us, and to both of us making unprecedented progress on all sorts of personal goals.
But as you can see, we're not perfect - e.g. we have this real conundrum that we need to figure out around meltdowns. And there is no perfect, nor will there ever be - but there
is ongoing personal evolution.
If he throws his head torch into the bushes, I guess it won't shine in your eyes any more.
ROFL
That was his reasoning at the time!
If he won't work on anything, I am not sure what anyone here can say to help, as successful measures with meltdowns or any such issue involve the adult concerned being on board. I guess you can choose not to mention your frustration, but that's something you would have to consider the pros and cons of.
Yeah, that's right, people need to take responsibility for their own stuff to be able to deal with it, and we can't do it for them. But I can meet him partway by learning to deal with those bits of my stuff that can exacerbate his stuff.
And while I clearly have to change the way I communicate about that, I can't entirely stop communicating about it. But...I actually think part of the frustration for him is that he can't see a solution for this, and perhaps is overly pessimistic about finding one. He's been trying willpower, I can see that - but that only keeps the lid on a bit longer, it doesn't stop it coming off.