“He said he couldn’t help himself, and that’s just the way he was, and I needed to understand he wasn’t able to change.”

Hi, I’m Michaela Bramwell, and I'm a Junior Staff Writer here at BuzzFeed, covering everything trending news, from your latest viral TikTok to the chaos of today's politics.

"I was saying how it starts in Rome, and he interrupted me to say it was a cruise of the Greek Isles, which it is, and it starts from Rome."

"He kept pressing me to add information. I politely declined. I said he was so anxious to talk about how the cruise started in Rome, he must know all about it."

"He said I made his home look bad, so he is sleeping in his little sister's room. She still has a twin bed. Lucky for him, she is with her fiancé's family this weekend."

"To answer the most common question I've read in the comments. Which of the hundred times the conversation happened? This first time he said he didn't realize he was interrupting. Fiftieth time, more or less, he said it wasn't that big a deal. The last time, roughly number 100, he said he couldn't help himself and that's just the way he was, and I needed to understand he wasn't able to change."

"If he insists on interrupting and correcting you, then he should be prepared to actually carry the conversation. You didn't embarrass him; he embarrassed himself. Maybe next time he'll let you finish."—Forward-Amount8035

"It works temporarily, but on the whole, he definitely interrupts far less now than before she started doing it (maybe 10-15 years ago)."—WhimisicalRenegade

"Not sure about this...My dad has started taking this approach with my mom because she's spent over a decade interrupting and correcting his stories, and not listening to his pleas for her to stop doing so. I can't say I blame him, but it's still awkward as hell every single time it happens and ends with her saying 'OK, go on,' and him saying 'no, obviously you've got it.' I would say that if you can try to convince him privately how much this irritates you (and with good reason!), you'll save yourselves and everyone around you a lot of discomfort for what might be the next decade of social interactions you share." —TCEA151

"Ummm…so like this is 'tit-for-tat' childish behavior. You two are adults. You talk to him after and tell him about how it makes you feel when he interrupts, and you work it out. What you are doing now is 'point scoring' where your goal is to score a point against him by hurting him in a manner equivalent to how he hurt you. This will just lead him to try to score a point later. This leads to resentment and couples that dislike each other. Yeah, being interrupted is annoying. Yeah, none of us are perfect, and we retaliate when we've been hurt. But this is NOT the strategy you should employ on a regular basis."—MrMarcusRocks

"This is one of the MANY reasons I separated from my husband. That would irk me to no end. It's disrespectful and inconsiderate. Interrupting you with the intention of 'correcting' you is not ok by any means. I got fed up with getting shut down constantly, and especially in front of others, so I was done. Also, his trying to downplay it after you've brought it up? Doesn't sound like he sees you and is choosing to ignore how his actions are making you feel."—FeminineRage