Don't take the blame. Just love on your son harder. If your DH makes a comment, tell him you will not entertain it; end of discussion. I would probably also tell him (without anger) that his disappointment in your son is causing you to feel disappointment in him. |
If the dad realized that there was a problem, why didn't he stay home more? He's old school, so he sees himself as the head of the household, right? A real man? Why doesn't the "real man" be a "real dad"? |
Did it ever occur to you that it takes two to tango? The OP is as responsible as her husband in the upbringing of their child. She can't pin this all on him. I am a wife and a mother, too. I get it. But OP needs to remember that when she points a finger at her husband then there are three fingers pointing right back at her. Playing the blame game now does their son a huge disservice. IMO she wouldn't be posting here if she hadn't bought in at least a little bit to her husband's "disappointment." Just sayin'. |
+1 |
I know how to draw boundaries without ending every relationship that needs them. Maybe OP should divorce, maybe she shouldn’t. I’m not going to pretend to know, but I do think she needs to put an end to the accepting the blame, alone, for her kid’s problems. |
I have a similar kid but single mom. I’m dealing with my disappointment and trying to get to the other side a let go. |
You won worst advice of the day. Congratulation |
why, it's the truth, isn't it? He gets to tell OP how he feels, but she doesn't get to tell her husband how she feels? But, I would protect my kids no matter what, even from their douche of a dad if it comes to it. |
Then you’re both wrong. You can guide your kids. You can offer them opportunities. You can give them therapy and drug treatment. You can send the. To the best schools available. But ultimately you can’t make them into who you want them to be. They will be who they are meant to be. You are lucky that this kid that you both blame each other for who he is has turned out to be pretty amazing. College. Friends. No legal issues that you’ve mentioned. Both of you should start counting your blessings. |
I don't know. I'd be pretty disappointed if my kids picked up pot smoking in HS. It would go against everything I tried to teach them and model. There's nothing wrong with feeling this way. It wouldn't mean I don't love my children and hope for better. |
Don't spend too much time blaming each other. Two person is always at fault when a relationship fail. Now, it's 3 because your son is older. He can think on his own.
What can you do to make things right for each other. If you can't meet each other's need, don't waste time on the relationship. If you are already thinking you don't want to spend more time thinking about the relationship, accept you have to part ways. Sometimes people blame others for their own short comings. Make a list if you have to. What can both of you do for your son as parents. HOW can you be there for him. Yes, one of you travel all the time, but heck, the phone is there isn't it. |
My dad was like this with my brother. Nothing was ever good enough. Guess what? My brother is now estranged from the family. He doesn't even contact my mom and my DS has never met him. |
I've found that people use the term old school to NOT mean old fashioned as it is intended.
They use it in place of "terrible person" "unreasonable" or in many cases "racist". Like, "my grandma is very old school when it comes to people of color." Grandma is a racist. "DH is old school" actually means DH is a shitty father. |
I know a family so much like yours, I swear I know your dh. The guy I know is a jerk and a bully and his older son, who I'm certain has learning disabilities, was a target for his derision. The younger son is known at many of the schools here as a horrible bully. Guess which kid he loves. This guy also is a financial abuser and treats his wife with derision in front of the rest of us. |
I would still love my kid but I would be disappointed in them too if they were using drugs, especially with some level of regularity as appears to be the case here. I wouldn't mind if my kid wasn't super ambitious but I would mind if they were lazy or entitled, can't tell if that's the case here (going to a good college suggests not, hard to tell). On the bright side, I bet a lot of this fades away once your kid goes to college because you won't be seeing them very often so really the only measure of hard work or not will adequate performance on the grades. |