Guy constantly feels unheard and overriden over "little things" but refuses to be more direct when they happen: 'If I did the same things he did, to my own mother, she would get incredibly angry'

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    man pointing at camera
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    AITBA if I hate feeling unheard or overridden over "little things" but refuse to be more direct when it happens?

    Basically I knew someone who would frequently fail to hear me, and I would usually let it go even if it was irritating because I thought it would cause more issues get visibly angry about it because I didn't trust I could balance
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    myself to not throw a hissy fit in public. I had to actively try to not blow a gasket. Like, sometimes I'd be like "Can I please go to [X]?" at an event with lots of activities, or even "Why
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    are we walking all the way over here?" and then seemingly not be heard at all, and then we'd just keep walking, or he'd say "let's go do [X]" without explicitly acknowledging the actual content of what I said, and I'd just not press
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    further. I remember even being in the car with him and we didn't know where to go for lunch, and I think I said "Can you please just pick something?" and then he just scrolled for like 5 more minutes in silence. I figured if I got upset about
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    something so small, and demanded he listen about it, it would just cause unnecessary suffering for everyone. Other times I'd ask and be acknowledged, except it would be to tell me some
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    reason I couldn't understand because it didn't make sense (he'd never just say "we CAN'T do it", he'd say "Well, [X reason]."), like if he thought the price would somehow change for the activity mid-way through
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    an event, or something about the line to wait for it, or the availability of other activities, or something, and we'd go in circles about it until I'd eventually be like "Fine" if he asked if I would rather do something else. Eventually
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    when he asked if I wanted to do something else I'd say "Fine" immediately because I assumed it meant I wasn't going to get to do it even if I asked harder, so I wanted to avoid the futile headache.
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    The second I receive pushback, it feels like I'm being indirectly told no, and that if I keep pushing back, all I'm going to accomplish is continually being told (an implicit) no over and over, until if I do get to do the thing, the
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    process of pushing back by giving counter-reasons why it should be possible was draining enough so that doing the thing doesn't actually help recoup the emotional impact of having had to ask for a minor thing
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    repeatedly. Other times he'd acknowledge what I wanted, and asked if I wanted to do it later (that day at the event), and then we wouldn't do it at all and he wouldn't acknowledge
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    that it failed to happen. Plus other times he'd initiate things without asking or go ahead without waiting for me or asking me to follow. Like the time my back was turned to him to look at
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    something on the ground, and I started speaking and mid-sentence I turn and he's yards turned walking away from me, so I run to catch up to him and say nothing. Or when he walked up to a booth when I was following him and he
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    gets into a conversation with the toy vendor to try to win a toy, without ever bothering to turn to me to actually ask if I wouldn't rather do something other than wait for him to be done with the booth, or even ask me if I would like
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    to play the game myself. I tried to quietly tell him "Can we please just go?" but it was like he didn't even hear me. I'd usually "let it go" in the moment, then at some point I'd disregard my
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    previous hesitation have enough and point out all the little problems at once. This happened a few times. He said he wished I brought stuff up in the moment, which I thought would just cause me to have a hissy fit in public.
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    over it if I ever allowed myself to get that deeply into my feelings as soon as they start, which I thought would just push him away harder. He also said I got mad about "little things" and needed to learn to let things go, especially in
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    group settings with other friends. I felt bitter because I made this assumption that if he cared, he would be able to discern the pattern in all my examples and stop just running into things or ignoring me by default. If I did the same
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    three men laughing
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    things he did, to my own mother, she would get incredibly angry. So I have to wonder if I'm consistent for expecting others to adhere to the standard I was taught, or if I'm a hypocrite because a lot of it was stuff I arguably had
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    been told before about, so it meant I didn't have the right to criticize HIM about it. And it felt like he was expecting me to spoonfeed him by telling him in the moment so he didn't have to actually think about things we
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    talked about beyond the actual instance of the conversation, which I didn't trust would even make him learn the pattern so he'd eventually not have to be told every single time - I worried I'd always have to tell him
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    everything to (not) do, like steering a car. So if I ever complained he could always fall back on "but I always do what you want [when you tell me]." And mind you this was all over stuff like...doing
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    recreational activities whenever we went out together. So it feels like maybe I was being extremely petty.
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    man standing in front of a window

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