It’s not “open to close.” It’s one hour per week. Four days a week he leaves at 3:30 and one day a week he leaves at 4:30. All of this drama and 11 pages of posts about a baby being in daycare for 46 hours per week instead of 45. |
Totally, eff that selfish needy baby. Maybe look into sending him off to one of those boarding schools for unloved children sooner rather than later. That way no one has to miss any of their BS (sorry definitely super important life saving) meetings. |
It’s just one more hour. |
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I remember when DD started daycare DH remarked on how evolved it was that so many dads were dropping off in the morning. I rolled my eyes because doing drop off is often less disruptive to to a job than pickup. Of course the men all do the drop offs lol.
FWIW OP, the calculus may change when your LO starts daycare. Before DD was born we were concerned about daycares that were closed by 5:30pm. Could we pick her up in time? After she started daycare we always made it by 4:30pm to get her home, fed and to bed on time. Not because we were super concerned about hours in daycare but because of her particular schedule. We were privileged to be able to do that. If both you and DH want your LO to be picked up at a certain time your DH needs to do his share on the days he can't do pickup by doing drop off that day. That being said, it is good he is doing pickup on the other days. If I had a choice I'd definitely pick drop off. |
The point is the ATTITUDE and the PRIORITIES. Duh. |
| Any chance your husband can move his schedule to do drop off on the day he has to stay later? In an hour later and out an hour later? |
Maybe op’s dh prioritizes keeping his job so he can put a roof over his baby’s head and food in her belly. Duh. |
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Are there no cell phones where he works? Is he not allowed to own a phone? You make the call in transit or when you get home
This is not hard. |
His priority is to keep his job. |
This. Come up with a plan. Mark your dropoff/pickups as private meetings on your calendar. With DH come up with an exercise spreadsheet (its important long term). Make sure he does 50% night feedings and well check up appointments. If you don't set the tone now, you will be one of the whiney complainers on DCUM who has an inept husband who can't do anything, so you end up quitting and regretting. |
DP I would get fired for this because it would be a direct violation of our safety protocols. Don't take calls while driving. It's totally unprofessional and dangerous. |
Spread sheets to make sure neither parent does a single minute more of childcare than the other parent? If two people distrust and resent each other that much, why in the world are they creating a family together? |
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Maybe it is inappropriate at his particular job to ask for the change because of the culture there. He’s in a better position to know that than any of us.
OP, what is your priority? Is it having your kid picked up early? If so, then you do it. As others have pointed out, marriage and child rearing is rarely actually 50-50 at all times. Sometimes one parent does “more” than the other and it all works out. If your priority is breaking your husband of the notion that his job is not as big a priority as he thinks it is, then that’s a bigger conversation and you have to decide if you want to go there. |
I hope OP has a robust emergency fund and is aggressively saving. If her husband is so low on the totem pole and/or completely disposable or easily replaceable that he would lose his job for, GASP, requesting to change the time or miss a weekly meeting, he’s not going to have his job for much longer anyway. Or, what is more likely, is that he could easily change the meeting (and possibly listen to some whiny colleagues p!ss and moan for a week or two before they GTF over it) but he simply doesn’t WANT to, and he is using the job as an excuse. |
Thanks for coming out. |