“Many think that assigning blame settles matters.” ~ Mason Cooley

A while back I wrote a post, Is Your Wife Always Mad at You?, and it generated a lot of comments.

Some of you said:

“So women get to act like children and men have to stay calm?”
“Why is it always about what men need to do?”
“I’ve never had a woman take accountability.”
“We’re exhausted.”

I hear the frustration.

And if you’ve felt like the emotional shock absorber in your marriage — absorbing criticism, containing explosions, swallowing your own reactions — of course you’re tired. Probably sick and tired!

But let’s separate two things that often get tangled together:

  1. Are women responsible for their behavior?
  2. Are you responsible for yours?

The answer to both is yes.

This is not about excusing bad behavior. It is about breaking destructive patterns.

When I talk about staying calm, I am not saying:

  • Accept disrespect.
  • Tolerate verbal abuse.
  • Suppress your feelings.
  • Pretend nothing affects you.
  • Carry the blame for everything that isn’t going right.

That’s not leadership. That’s a recipe for resentment.

Staying grounded is not about protecting her from consequences.

It’s about protecting you from reacting in ways that weaken your position.

There is a massive difference.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth:

You can’t control whether she takes accountability.

You can only control whether you escalate or stabilize.

Let me be crystal clear:

If your wife is:

  • insulting
  • demeaning
  • chronically contemptuous
  • refusing responsibility
  • weaponizing emotion

That is not healthy. It is not acceptable. And it needs to be addressed, not quietly absorbed.

But here’s the part many men miss:

You can address her behavior far more effectively when you are not emotionally flooded.

Many men hear “stay calm” as:

“Take it.”
“Suck it up.”
“Be the emotional mule.”

That is not the message.

The message is:

Your emotional control is your power.

Your behavior is your leverage.

Your steadiness changes the temperature of the room.

Emotional steadiness is not about passing “her test”.

It’s about ending the cycle.

And I certainly don’t think men are the only ones who need to change.

Let me say this clearly: she must do her work too

But someone has to move to interrupt the cycle. And real leaders go first.

And refusing to be reactive is how you take your power back.

You’ve got this. But if you don’t, I’ve got you. If you’re tired of not being respected, contact me and type Now.

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