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I agree that it is easier for the parent who will be handing off to the sitter to handle this. It just works better logistically.
My feelings have nothing to do with the importance of the two tasks. If op was off on a ladies weekend and her dh was working late I would feel the same. |
| Just to CYA, I really think the Dads should have minimal contact with teenage female babysitters. |
Agreed. Ha ha seems exactly like something my DH will say. Yesterday he basically blamed his laziness on ME. Said |
| I agree about some Dad's being iffy on contact with babysitters. I never let my DD babysit after my own experiences fending off drunk Dads driving me home. |
This is the correct answer. |
We have 2 daughters and my husband just out of respect for parents who might be anxious about it does not text nor drive any babysitters. His feeling is he as a dad probably wouldn't be comfortable with a grown man texting his teenage daughter or riding alone with her in a car at night, so he doesn't do it. |
| Another voice for YOU getting the sitter and his excuse is bullshit. |
If you can't trust the parents of the children your daughter is sitting for, she shouldn't be sitting for them. Is it okay for a drunk or high mother to drive your daughter home? |
My daughters don't babysit. My husband does not text nor drive the babysitters we use because he thinks it's something neither the babysitter nor the parents should have to worry about. Girls feel safer with women in a car alone at night. So I drive them home if they need a ride. And I'm never drunk or high... Though you might be... |
| If he were going to a bar or social event, I would want him to find the sitter. But he is working. You are the parent responsible for the kids while your husband is working. |
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It just doesn't make a lot of sense to me for the person who will be out of town to be the contact person for the babysitter.
We have had needed sitters both when DH is on a work trip and I'm the point person at home, and when I'm traveling and he's the point person at home. Part of being the "point person" is dealing with sitters. |
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He's stupid, we all agree. But is it worth it to argue with him and risk finding out too late that he *hasn't* made the appointment? My husband's like this too so I sympathize. There are times when I blow up and tell him off. It doesn't change a darn thing. |
| You don't work. How is this even a question? Good grief! |
I hope you are still around, PP. I am a new poster here, and a divorced mother who stayed at home for nearly a decade. It only took me a month to find a full-time job after my divorce. I have been working for nearly three years now, and I am pretty successful. I love to work - it's easier than staying at home, at least the way I did it. Then again, I did EVERYTHING for my three kids, my house, and my husband during my marriage. When my awful marriage ended, I hardly noticed he was gone in terms of my workload. OP, get off your ass and find a babysitter if you want to volunteer. You are giving everyone a bad name here. |
Yes, of course.
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