emtkelley
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A few months ago I posted about my husband's online gaming addiction.
During the summer, he was out of paramedic class for summer break. He is back in class and the gaming has not stopped. This has been a very tough summer for us due to the gaming and he promised me he would stop when class started. Being no stranger to addiction, I knew not to believe him and I silently waited to see him trip himself up.
I came home last week and caught him gaming while he was doing homework. He had two days to do the homework and he waited until the last minute, one hour before he had to leave to do it. To make things worse, it was the homework he was supposed to study off of for a cardiac rythmns test that evening. I was pissed and got upset with him. Told him he was going to blow everything he had worked for and he is in his final year. He has made the dean's list with 4.0 last year and I want to see him acheive that again this year. At this rate, I will be happy if he passes. Needless to say, he did poorly on the test. He likes to brag about how good he is to his fellow students and anyone who will listen and he is loosing his credibility fast.
My husband is an extremely smart person and his mind is being reduce to mush by this gaming crap. He goes to work and that's it. he makes a beeline for his "room" to play the game and doesn't come out until bedtime. I sit out in the living room by myself.
I was once in his class last year and I had to drop to get a second job to bring in more money to help with bills. This year, I wan't able to get back in because of low enrollment asn now I am fearful I may never make it back in, and I will be 44 in November. My husband is several years younger than I. I know his instructor (he was my instructor and is a great guy) and I am tempted to tell him about the addiction so he can maybe have a better handle on why my husband is not performing as well this year as he was and maybe speak with him about it. This is the third time my husband has attempted to get through his paramedic and if he fails, he will hate himself.
I know in the end, it is my husband who will decide which is more important to him, the gaming or class but I just wish there was something I could do. I am to the point of going in and deleting his character and taking the game out and detroying it, at the risk of him going into a rage. That is how much this gaming has ruined my life.
Any ideas?
During the summer, he was out of paramedic class for summer break. He is back in class and the gaming has not stopped. This has been a very tough summer for us due to the gaming and he promised me he would stop when class started. Being no stranger to addiction, I knew not to believe him and I silently waited to see him trip himself up.
I came home last week and caught him gaming while he was doing homework. He had two days to do the homework and he waited until the last minute, one hour before he had to leave to do it. To make things worse, it was the homework he was supposed to study off of for a cardiac rythmns test that evening. I was pissed and got upset with him. Told him he was going to blow everything he had worked for and he is in his final year. He has made the dean's list with 4.0 last year and I want to see him acheive that again this year. At this rate, I will be happy if he passes. Needless to say, he did poorly on the test. He likes to brag about how good he is to his fellow students and anyone who will listen and he is loosing his credibility fast.
My husband is an extremely smart person and his mind is being reduce to mush by this gaming crap. He goes to work and that's it. he makes a beeline for his "room" to play the game and doesn't come out until bedtime. I sit out in the living room by myself.
I was once in his class last year and I had to drop to get a second job to bring in more money to help with bills. This year, I wan't able to get back in because of low enrollment asn now I am fearful I may never make it back in, and I will be 44 in November. My husband is several years younger than I. I know his instructor (he was my instructor and is a great guy) and I am tempted to tell him about the addiction so he can maybe have a better handle on why my husband is not performing as well this year as he was and maybe speak with him about it. This is the third time my husband has attempted to get through his paramedic and if he fails, he will hate himself.
I know in the end, it is my husband who will decide which is more important to him, the gaming or class but I just wish there was something I could do. I am to the point of going in and deleting his character and taking the game out and detroying it, at the risk of him going into a rage. That is how much this gaming has ruined my life.
Any ideas?