Is co parenting a woke male trap?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean this is why many women make the best of marriage. Once you have a kid, you are tied together for life. If there isn't abuse, it can make more sense to just figure out some kind of equilibrium that works, even if it's not fair, and make the best of it.

This is a major reason I chose to only have one kid. Once I discovered what my DH was like as a dad and realized how much would fall to me, I chose to keep my workload as low as possible. My one kid is pretty great though, and I've also coached my DH into being a good father, so I feel I've done right by DD.

Completely insane that women have to do this. Jesus.


Women don’t have to do anything. Having a child with a man is a choice. I know many women who choose not the have a child with a man because of the reputation men have as lazy fathers.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:No one can make you overcompensate for a lazy parent. it’s a choice. Divorce is better because you get free from the emotional abuse. You compartmentalize and do your best to raise your kids well on your time and let the rest go.

This is my approach and my kid is thriving. I also put my kid in therapy. She can process her dad’s laziness further when she’s an adult, but Mom will not be playing martyr. It’s unhealthy and sets a very poor example.


I think it's really a case by case basis and what worked for you won't work for everyone. A woman who chooses not to get divorced is not agreeing to be a martyr, and I think most women who decide to stay in the marriage and make it work are doing EXACTLY what you are doing: compartmentalizing, doing their best to raise their kids, and letting the rest go.

I've forced more equality into our marriage as well. I don't just shoulder it all and suffer in silence. DH won't plan anything. Not for himself, not for the family, not for our DC. So I plan it all, but that means I make all the choices. If he complains, I tell him that he's welcome to plan himself. He never does. So I hold outsized power over decision making in our house, because I'm the one who executes everything. Early on I worked harder to incorporate him into choices, but when I realized how little initiative he would take, that changed. For the last decade, I mostly do what I want and he mostly goes alone with it. Is it equal? No. Is it the marriage I imagined for myself? Also no. Does it allow me a better lifestyle overall, because of the efficiencies of a two-income household, and is it conducive to a better relationship between DC and DH? Yes. So it's worth it for me. I am not powerless. I chose this for myself and am reasonably happy and feel I'm doing right by myself and my child.

There was definitely a juncture (well, realistically, many junctures) where this deal I made for myself might have headed towards martyrdom and misery. DH absolutely used to fight me on decision making, while expecting to sit back and do nothing because "you're better at planning" or "you'll just yell at me if I make mistakes" and it did feel manipulative and I felt very resentful. Those are the times we've been closest to divorce. I think being willing to walk out the door, and I was, helped me stand up for myself so I didn't get walked all over.

The interesting thing is that it became very obvious DH was much more afraid of divorce than I was. And that makes sense -- if you are inherently lazy and constantly shirking responsibility for everything, the idea of being on your own, having to parent alone and take care of your own household, must be terrifying. That doesn't scare me at all. The only part I don't like is the money part, what it means to separate our households. But just taking care of DC on my own, running my own house? I know I could do that and that in some ways it would be easier than what I do now. Realizing that divorce scared him and didn't scare me helped me find more agency in our marriage. I know what my best alternative to staying married is, and it's really not that bad. But I've always found a way to make it work while staying married.


I’m skeptical that you are actually happy. Living with someone who doesn’t respect your energy is draining. Most of the women I know who take your position are just ones who are afraid of taking care of themselves financially.


OK if that's your opinion. It was the right choice for me. I sense your response is much more about justifying your own choices than any actual concern or interest in my life, so whatever.


Not at all. I genuinely feel bad for women who are in these crappy situations.

As someone who used to have the fears that many of these women have, I like to be honest and share my experience which is that cutting the dead weight of a lazy husband/father is very liberating. It does require that you be able to earn though. but for me personally my earning skyrocketed past those of my ex, once I didn’t have a hater living in my home.
Anonymous
But getting rid of them means one fewer "child" for you to take care of.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Not really clear what you are trying to say, but I'll bite.

I divorced my xH because he didn't pull his weight. We have 50/50 custody and it's SO much less work for me. He has a court order to do half the school pickups/dropoffs, half the sick days, etc. Even bigger, I no longer have to cook for or clean up after a grown man. People really have no idea how much FOOD adult men need to be fed, or how their crap gets absolutely everywhere.

Even if he bailed completely, he'd have to pay child support AND I still wouldn't have to cook and clean for him.

I also think a LOT of men step it up when they realize their parenting will be examined in a court room by a judge. It's one thing at home behind closed doors, but another to know it could be brought out in front of complete strangers to judge.


Sounds like you should stay single and not have boys as teens can eat too. It’s too bad you hate men.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean this is why many women make the best of marriage. Once you have a kid, you are tied together for life. If there isn't abuse, it can make more sense to just figure out some kind of equilibrium that works, even if it's not fair, and make the best of it.

This is a major reason I chose to only have one kid. Once I discovered what my DH was like as a dad and realized how much would fall to me, I chose to keep my workload as low as possible. My one kid is pretty great though, and I've also coached my DH into being a good father, so I feel I've done right by DD.

Completely insane that women have to do this. Jesus.


PP here and I agree with you -- it is nuts that this is what happened and I definitely went through a period of resentment over it.

But I worked through that and just accepted it, primarily because my DH proved coachable. Early on it was touch and go because it meant he had to level up in emotional maturity and when he was an overwhelmed new dad, I wasn't sure that was going to happen. But then it did, and things got incrementally better, and now we're honestly in a decent place. It's not 50/50 but he's still a "good dad" by 2026 standards, which includes taking a real interest in his child's life, spending time with his kid by his own volition and having largely positive interactions (not just arguing/being combative/criticizing/judging), and performing at least some of the caretaking like feeding, laundry, sticking to a schedule (the degree to which I've scaffolded his ability to do this is more extensive than our kid knows, but oh well, at least he's packing her a lunch sometimes even if it's using a system I set up for him to make it as easy and painless as possible).

The important thing to me is that our DD feels loved, valued, and respected by her dad. I did not have this growing up, or as an adult, and it's not great. It's one of the main reasons I stayed and it is the main reason I put the effort in to make this happen. It wasn't for him, it was for her. I know what it is to be ignored, neglected, and unloved by your dad, and when I realized I had (without meaning to) married someone who had a lot of the same parenting traits as my own dad, I just made it my mission to make sure DD had more than I did. It was worth it to me.


I admire you.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean this is why many women make the best of marriage. Once you have a kid, you are tied together for life. If there isn't abuse, it can make more sense to just figure out some kind of equilibrium that works, even if it's not fair, and make the best of it.

This is a major reason I chose to only have one kid. Once I discovered what my DH was like as a dad and realized how much would fall to me, I chose to keep my workload as low as possible. My one kid is pretty great though, and I've also coached my DH into being a good father, so I feel I've done right by DD.

Completely insane that women have to do this. Jesus.


Women don’t have to do anything. Having a child with a man is a choice. I know many women who choose not the have a child with a man because of the reputation men have as lazy fathers.

This comment is so very stupid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not really clear what you are trying to say, but I'll bite.

I divorced my xH because he didn't pull his weight. We have 50/50 custody and it's SO much less work for me. He has a court order to do half the school pickups/dropoffs, half the sick days, etc. Even bigger, I no longer have to cook for or clean up after a grown man. People really have no idea how much FOOD adult men need to be fed, or how their crap gets absolutely everywhere.

Even if he bailed completely, he'd have to pay child support AND I still wouldn't have to cook and clean for him.

I also think a LOT of men step it up when they realize their parenting will be examined in a court room by a judge. It's one thing at home behind closed doors, but another to know it could be brought out in front of complete strangers to judge.


Sounds like you should stay single and not have boys as teens can eat too. It’s too bad you hate men.

I love how women being sick of men treating women like trash (because they actually were raised to hate them) means we hate men, not that we have finally grown a spine. We don’t kill them en masse or sexually assault them or continually make jokes at their expense and push them out at work. We do nothing but comply with the demands of living in a patriarchal society and when we say “enough” then we suddenly hate you. Oh poor baby.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I decided to be decent people despite our flaws, and respect each other. It's weird but it works for us.

That’s great. Most men perform respect and never actually feel or act it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I mean this is why many women make the best of marriage. Once you have a kid, you are tied together for life. If there isn't abuse, it can make more sense to just figure out some kind of equilibrium that works, even if it's not fair, and make the best of it.

This is a major reason I chose to only have one kid. Once I discovered what my DH was like as a dad and realized how much would fall to me, I chose to keep my workload as low as possible. My one kid is pretty great though, and I've also coached my DH into being a good father, so I feel I've done right by DD.


This is what sensible women do, have one kid and keep life manageable instead of having kid after kid and keep complaining.


Well, I’d argue that sensible women don’t marry losers… I didn’t and neither did most of my friends.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Seems a common theme is wives leaving because they just can’t tolerate having a child for a husband. Weaponzied incompetence, performative parenting, etc. but then, once divorced, you are supposed to continue doing all the organizing and invisible labor, or else you aren’t a cooperative co parent and “the kids will suffer”. We divorce them when they don’t pull their weight in marriage but then tolerate it once divorced.


Wut
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Not really clear what you are trying to say, but I'll bite.

I divorced my xH because he didn't pull his weight. We have 50/50 custody and it's SO much less work for me. He has a court order to do half the school pickups/dropoffs, half the sick days, etc. Even bigger, I no longer have to cook for or clean up after a grown man. People really have no idea how much FOOD adult men need to be fed, or how their crap gets absolutely everywhere.

Even if he bailed completely, he'd have to pay child support AND I still wouldn't have to cook and clean for him.

I also think a LOT of men step it up when they realize their parenting will be examined in a court room by a judge. It's one thing at home behind closed doors, but another to know it could be brought out in front of complete strangers to judge.


Most men already parent effectively. It's only the losers who end up in front of a judge and that's a very small proportion of the male population.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Not really clear what you are trying to say, but I'll bite.

I divorced my xH because he didn't pull his weight. We have 50/50 custody and it's SO much less work for me. He has a court order to do half the school pickups/dropoffs, half the sick days, etc. Even bigger, I no longer have to cook for or clean up after a grown man. People really have no idea how much FOOD adult men need to be fed, or how their crap gets absolutely everywhere.

Even if he bailed completely, he'd have to pay child support AND I still wouldn't have to cook and clean for him.

I also think a LOT of men step it up when they realize their parenting will be examined in a court room by a judge. It's one thing at home behind closed doors, but another to know it could be brought out in front of complete strangers to judge.


Sounds like you should stay single and not have boys as teens can eat too. It’s too bad you hate men.


I don’t hate all men! I’m quite fond of my current BF.

If I had a teenage boy (I have all DDs), I would have the same expectations as I would teenage daughters AND husbands. You contribute to the household and help with cooking, cleaning up after dinner, setting the table, etc. I absolutely would resent a teenage boy who behaved like my xH, which was to come home, park his butt on the couch, and sit there on a screen until dinner was ready. Gobble it down then get back to the couch.

Its not about eating massive amount of food. It’s about expecting somebody else to buy the food, prepare the food, and clean up after you’ve eaten the food. Cooking for just myself has automatically cut down on my food expenses and time spent cooking by over half.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:The logic here is wild. You divorce a man because he refuses to carry his share of the load and somehow after the divorce you’re expected to keep project-managing his life so the kids’ schedules don’t fall apart? Absolutely not.

That’s what divorce orders are for. Spell. Everything. Out. Pickup times, drop-offs, school forms, medical appointments, activity registration, communication methods, every single task that used to live in the “invisible labor” bucket. If it matters, stipulate it.

And if he doesn’t hold up his end? You don’t sigh and quietly pick up the slack so no one notices. You document it and drag his ass back to court. Judges exist for a reason.

Coparenting does not mean continuing to be your ex-husband’s unpaid executive assistant. His parenting time is his responsibility. His logistics are his problem. His failures are not yours to cushion.

Not your circus. Not your monkeys.


But aren’t they literally your monkeys?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't agree with OP (actually not quite sure of the argument) but I do think that if we could, as a society, figure out why so many men have this issue with arrested development and expect their wives to mother them, we could solve all kinds of problems. Family problems, relationship problems, childhood problems. Like if men just showed up in family life as independent adults who were (1) capable of caring for themselves, and (2) capable of caring for other people to a reasonable degree as appropriate, then this makes everything about marriage and parenting easier.

#notallmen of course -- there are absolutely men who do this. And there are of course women who don't, I get it. But it is far more common for the woman to be kind of duct taping family life together because her husband just doesn't have the skill set to be a real partner. and I'm not even talking about some equal, 50/50 ideal of coparenting. I see this also in marriages where the wife stays home with the kids and the man goes to work -- I still see men just not taking responsibility for themselves or their lives, and their SAHM wives absolutely managing them like another child. No matter how you allocate the workload, it works best of both adults can manage their own life and then some. When should not be managing themselves, their kids, AND their husbands. It makes no sense.


Just my own observation, but of the men I've dated, the ones who were actual MEN and not looking for a mother figure had very strong positive male role models. These role models actively taught them how to be a man, how to treat women, etc. It wasn't always fathers - often stepfathers, foster dad, uncles, pastors, etc.

The men I've known who were arrested development/needed a mom figure didn't have this and basically mimicked how they saw their fathers/other men in their lives behave. Dads were usually checked out and mom did everything, so it was easy for them to fall back into that once a woman was in the picture.

I don't know what the solution is. We can't force men to step it up and do better for their sons' sake. The closest thing I can think of is mandatory military service for men, although that would need a complete overhaul to get rid of all the toxicity.


Maybe stop procreating with these men for a start?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I don't agree with OP (actually not quite sure of the argument) but I do think that if we could, as a society, figure out why so many men have this issue with arrested development and expect their wives to mother them, we could solve all kinds of problems. Family problems, relationship problems, childhood problems. Like if men just showed up in family life as independent adults who were (1) capable of caring for themselves, and (2) capable of caring for other people to a reasonable degree as appropriate, then this makes everything about marriage and parenting easier.

#notallmen of course -- there are absolutely men who do this. And there are of course women who don't, I get it. But it is far more common for the woman to be kind of duct taping family life together because her husband just doesn't have the skill set to be a real partner. and I'm not even talking about some equal, 50/50 ideal of coparenting. I see this also in marriages where the wife stays home with the kids and the man goes to work -- I still see men just not taking responsibility for themselves or their lives, and their SAHM wives absolutely managing them like another child. No matter how you allocate the workload, it works best of both adults can manage their own life and then some. When should not be managing themselves, their kids, AND their husbands. It makes no sense.


Just my own observation, but of the men I've dated, the ones who were actual MEN and not looking for a mother figure had very strong positive male role models. These role models actively taught them how to be a man, how to treat women, etc. It wasn't always fathers - often stepfathers, foster dad, uncles, pastors, etc.

The men I've known who were arrested development/needed a mom figure didn't have this and basically mimicked how they saw their fathers/other men in their lives behave. Dads were usually checked out and mom did everything, so it was easy for them to fall back into that once a woman was in the picture.

I don't know what the solution is. We can't force men to step it up and do better for their sons' sake. The closest thing I can think of is mandatory military service for men, although that would need a complete overhaul to get rid of all the toxicity.


Your military service comment sparked a thought for me. My weaponized incompetence former DH/now lazy comparent exDH has always surrounded himself by women who prop him up. He’s also been very dismissive of the military or flat-out anti-military since we met. My family always had a few people on the military even though we aren’t really rah-rah about it so I found his strong feelings about the military to be inarticulate and strange since he’d never experience even proximity to it.

My take is that my exDH sees within the military the prospect of forced accountability and standards and it really threatened him even as someone who wasn’t part of it. So perhaps the military is the answer to reparent these men between childhood and releasing them into the adult world?


Genuine question - his attitude didn’t raise any red flags for you?
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: