While I agree that he should be getting up and moving about, etc--I do not agree that it is the OP'S responsibility to try to wake him and force him to do so. Her husband has shown time and time again that he resents her efforts to help him and does not want them. I think she is right to stop putting herself out there and trying to help only to be yelled at. She shouldn't be going out of her way to enable his behaviour (being quiet so he can sleep during the day, for example) but should not be trying to force him to take care of himself either. Especially given that this is a relatively new relationship and he was dealing (poorly) with his issues long before he came along--this is not a 20 year relationship in which new health and mental problems have suddenly reared their ugly heads.
I never advocated anywhere in this thread that she force him to do anything. I was approaching it from a teaching perspective for a wife who is helping care for her husband, just like I would do IRL if he was a patient of mine. As others have since noted, the OP didn't seem to see a problem with this type of behavior from him and I was just pointing out what normal should be.
From what I understand from what the OP has written, some of his sickness is his fault. Diabetes is controllable. Mental illness is controllable. He's refusing to take care of his illnesses and is making OP shoulder the burden of caring for his lack of control in regards to his health.
This is not the same as a someone who has cancer, and illness beyond a patient's control. It's not like an older person with Alzheimer's that is beyond their control.
I'm guessing you were talking more about depression (and even that's not always the case), but bipolar disease is not something that's always within one's control. (In fact, efforts at self-control are often disastrous.) Hopefully with psychiatric care and ongoing evaluation and med adjustment, it can be managed. But even with good care and follow up there can be highs and lows, and occasional setbacks.
I kind of started a big ol' response to all of this that kind of went blah blah he shouldn't do this blah blah you shouldn't do that blah blah over and over
I agree about the blah, blah, blah part. The same thing's been said over and over here in various forms from the beginning of this thread. BTW I also grew up in a household with similarities to this one. Some women just don't have it within them to change things and so just never, ever will. What I am seeing from the OP's responses is that she is not committed to leaving and will likely stay, which is why I think it's worthwhile to at least try to help her see what normal is, since she doesn't seem to know - why is unclear. As I said way back in the beginning, she likely didn't grow up herself with normal.
I agree with those who say this seems to be a codependent relationship.
Frozen, if you want to share, I'd be interested to know how you yourself grew up.