Who said anything about taking the kids? Of course you can't take the kids and move out of state against your husband's will. But you previously seemingly implied he wasn't against the idea moving, just too lazy or too busy or too overwhelmed or too intimidated with everything that might need to be done to make it happen. So the actual problem here is he does not want to move. He disagrees with you. But that doesn't stop you from moving out of state if it's so important to you, if his preferences don't matter, if breaking up the family doesn't matter. Which it doesn't, as long as you get to take the kids with you. So none of this is about geography at all. It's about that you don't love your husband. You are unhappy where you are because you are married to a person you don't want to be married to. And you would be perfectly happy to divorce him and move away assuming you could take the kids with you. That would be just fine. What you need to do is file for divorce. You realize of course that you can't take school age children out of state, you can't take them with you, without an actual reason, and you don't have the kind of reason that would hold up in court. And I think you are well aware of that which is why you are venting here. I am not sure the problem is with your husband though. A good mom would never think it a good idea to break up her family and take her kids away from their father like you apparently want to. |
| Completely agree this area is uptight and unfriendly. DH and I tried to improve relations in our neighborhood by inviting neighbors to gather for some physical fellowship, basically just doing trust falls, which are a great way of developing trust in a fun environment and human pyramids. Human pyramids are another, a great way (gateway) to not just say, but really show, We Are Stronger Together. But NO ONE joined in. Instead we were branded as freaks and weirdos and one woman gave us the finger. So sad. |
PP here. My feelings about the city changed when we had kids. I liked being in the city when my life revolved around work and socializing. Now my life revolved around my kids. Plus I'm 100% remote and at a stage in my career that is not about networking. I also find parenting culture in the DMV unpleasant. It's an aspect of this area I didn't understand before having kids because I moved here as an adult. Many of my closest friends in this area moved away after having kids, specifically fur the reasons I want to move. Of those still here, about half are like me and want to move. It made sense to move here when I was 22, fir grad school and job opportunities. It makes less sense now, but my DH is resistant to change. No one is "looking for happiness from external things." It's just normal for people's priorities to change over time. A 25 year old, single, childless person with parents in their 50s wants different things than a 42 year old, married person with two kids and parents in their late 70s. |
I mean...of course? Before we had kids, we lived in a one bedroom apartment. We started having kids, we moved to a bigger apartment, we started looking for a house in a good area for kids. Ultimately we decided to move out of the d.c. area to be close to extended family elsewhere in the northeast. None of this evolution was a surprise to either of us though. How do you get married in the first place and not have a discussion about kids, careers, where you might want to live in the future, etc.? How is that not an on going mutual discussion? Usually the compromises are about money. Wife is perfectly fine with living in a high stress high income area. Then has kids and decides the family needs to move to a lower stress more kid friendly home/school district/state, usually near her mom/dad extended family Ok what financial sacrifices is she prepared to make? Crickets. |
+1. Only in the DMV would posters take OP not liking this area as a personal affront - proving OPs point so well. |
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Also what is "parenting culture in the DMV" even mean,and why does it matter? Stop talking in riddles.
It sounds like you and many other moms are obsessed with pecking order and status. As in how you compare to people who you feel are wealthier than you are. Guess what? Parenting culture in your own family is whatever you and your spouse agree it is. No one else gets a vote. You'd be much happier if you weren't so obsessed with kith your social rank and how you stack up with all the other DMV Karen's. |
True, but only people who have resided elsewhere, or have a frame of reference better than the DC area, understand this. |
Of course where you live matters. This involves conflict between a wife who wants to move elsewhere vs. a husband who does not want to move elsewhere. The wife is repeatedly saying all the reasons why she thinks DMV sucks and that her husband is an ahole because he won't move and she is ready to divorce him. But all of the reasons she gave were untrue. Other than money. It's not the traffic it's not the weather it's not being close to family because she's talking about moving to Princeton. She said she can live cheaper in Princeton and they can make equal or more combined income there. Now someone says it's "parenting culture.". Translation it's money and status. OP feels she can't live the comparative lifestyle she thinks she is entitled to in DMV and has a low rank in the parenting culture. She can't afford the best private schools. She cant afford.to live in the biggest house in the best neighborhoods with Barack and Michelle. She can't afford a new SUV every year. In contrast, husband is satisfied with the money they make and the lifestyle they lead. May not put them at the top of the parental culture heap but is adequate. Ops feelings and opinions are entitled to exactly zero priority more than her husband's. She has not given a single good reason to uproot the entire family to move to Princeton. It would disrupt both of their employment and the kids schooling to get what in return? She thinks she will wind up in a better neighborhood in a better house? Maybe maybe not. It's a gamble. You don't take major gambles like that with school age kids unless you have clear buy in from both parents. She doesn't. She is completely I persuasive. "Wahhhhhh I am so unhappy and will divorce you if we don't move!!!" is not going to work on an actual man. |
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Also, threatening the husband with child abduction if he didn't agree to move--which is what OP did, and got the predictable response from her husband that he would file for divorce if she snatched the kids and took them over state lines--is not a very good negotiating strategy. Also,as her attorney must have told her,it is illegal.
OP, the only thing you accomplished by making your crazy illegal threat to commit parental abduction was to ensure that now your husband will likely NEVER agree to move to Princeton. Suck it up buttercup. You're in DMV until your spouse decides otherwise. |
| Jesus Christ do the posters on this thread illustrate why this area sucks so much. This place is full of insecure, argumentative lawyers who were total dorks in high school and are trying to get their revenge on the world by acting like bullying a-holes. |
You're painting things as if he disengages re: moving, and that repeatedly halts the plans you already have set in motion by applying for jobs, buying airline tickets, reserving a spot for your child in private school. Do you not realize that he is using the only control he feels he has over the situation, since you have already taken a ton of unilateral steps without him? He sees that, knows you have planned out your life, his life and your kids' lives without consulting him, so he exercises the one and only kind of control he has -- the veto power of not engaging. Not sending his resume, not getting on the plane, not talking about it in therapy. And he knows by now that you will have to back down once he exercises that veto. I am not going to say "Then just divorce him" because you say you can only move WITH him (for the $$ and your child's needs, I suppose?). I posted a more supportive post earlier, talking about getting into serious couples therapy to work out the resentments and his fears. But your post above makes me think both he AND you have issues so deep you both need indivdual therapy and couples therapy. Is your current therapist any good? I can't see how that could be true if the therapist doesn't call him out on walking away when the issue of The Move comes up. But you, too, are so focused on moving that you make plans, actually execute them, and present him the results right up to the one point YOU cannot control, his going for job interviews, the one thing you cannot do for him. You make unilateral plans and he wont' follow through. Maybe he sees those plans and thinks, he is being moved around like a piece on a chess board, until he does the one thing he knows will stop you every time. I'm not defending him, PP! But I also think you need some outside insight into your own actions. And you say absolutely nothing about wanting him in your life other than as something which enables you to move. Nothing about your relationship other than seeing him as needed for you to get where you want to be. I've seldom seen a sadder post on DCUM because you're objectively right about all the reasons a move would make perfect sense for your family. But there seem to be horrible communications and emotional dynamics between you and your DH and your current therapy doesn't seem to be helping -- does it? |
The fact that you think the bolded is what everyone wants is exactly what a lot of people don't like about the culture in the DMV. The idea that you think there is a "parental culture heap" that you can be "at the top of" is precisely what I hate about parenting culture in DC. No thank you. |
+1,000,000,000 This thread is like Exhibit A in what is wrong with this area. And yes, DCUM is a microcosm and not everyone here is like this. But you don't need everyone to be like this, you just need a crucial mass of competitive, insecure, argumentative people and everyone is miserable. And we have that here. The concentration is just higher on DCUM than it is in some other settings (but not all!). |
You haven't explained what you mean by "parenting culture.". But you seem to think many others believe it is a status competition, and that you dislike that other people think that. So how is that different from what I had expressed? Parenting culture means the status competiton among DMV moms for who has more.status.and.wealth. apparently it's a real thing and you hate.it. What I told the other pp, and ask you, is why do you hate it? Nothing requires you to participate. It's your own insecurities at play. Thats you, not where you live. You feel deeply insecure if you're not at or near the top of what you perceive to be the heap and it bugs you to be reminded that.you care. But you obviously do |
Oh my god, listen to yourself. |