Yes that’s me. So glad I left, by the way! |
NP. I have special needs children and think you're being defensive. Having special needs children can definitely be isolating. Small talk isn't. |
Well, you still need therapy, so there’s that. |
Congratulations. Then it's easier now that he's gone. You don't have to say that, of course, but you can think it. |
This. I also find it interesting when people receive feedback that "I don't know how you do it" lands a certain way, the immediate response of most people is to tell you to get over it and it's a compliment. Maybe try considering how the statement lands to someone who is actually hearing it. |
"I know, right? Parenting sure is hard!" |
I say this a lot to people because I am genuinely overwhelmed when my husband is gone for like one night, which makes me feel lame, and I truly don't understand how people do it. Kind of like when people tell me they run marathons and I'm like omg how do you do it. But I guess in the future I'll be more sensitive - thanks for letting me know people could take this as hurtful. |
I am the first quoted poster here. It’s smart to consider how things land; it’s at least just as smart to also consider intent. I definitely never said get over it or anything similar in tone and did consider. The poster with the special needs child makes a really great point and I can understand that perspective completely. To me it is a bit different, from my perspective. Saying to OP I don’t know how you do it is more situational - “it” is a situation, being sole parent, and applies to similar situations like a single parent, military spouse, etc. Saying I don’t know how you do it to a SN parent doesn’t seem situational but instead is personal - “it” is supposed to be your child?!? That I can see clearly as offensive, whether intended that way or not. The situational one is not so obviously offensive to me. |
How is being a single parent, which is often not a choice or a situation that someone is thrilled to be in, not personal? Often, like special needs, it is something that happens to you for one reason or another. |
Of course implicit in "I don't know how you do it" is that the situation semi-sucks!!!! Who wants to hear that?
Does anyone say "I don't know how you do it" to someone embarking on a relaxing beach vacation or to someone with an awesome husband/dad-of-the-year type? No, they sure as hell don't. |
I don't complain about my single-mom status, but a lot of friends with kids say this to me. It's meant as a compliment and not to point out your single status. Take is as such |
If you’d read any of OPs other pots, then you know she’s looking for a pat on the head. That’s why she’s looking for clarification..so she can get more pats. |
Attention. I love my husband and love having him around and he does a lot but honestly there are some days when he travels its just so much easier (except we miss him). |
It is refreshing to see someone take something intended as positive in exactly that way. You see like someone people would like being friends with for finding offensive anywhere it could possibly be found. |
It's a compliment, nothing to get like that over. |