No it means you outsource a lot because he's not going to work less to come home and vacuum. |
DP: Probably because most couples want to be on the same page when it comes to what is best for the children. When one parent doesn't care about something the other parent thinks is important to the child's life and develpment, it will cause serious conflict in the marriage. The notion that "you care more, so you do it" is a good way to parent or resolve parent conflicts, just furthers the already existing rift between them. Not only are you not trying to get on the same page and find a compromise, you are dumping the full wieght of the issue on one parent. |
The red dress is just not that. You're not going to convince a rational spouse that this dress is the end all be all, and that's what we're talking about here. |
You missed the point because you did not read my post carefully. Reread it and focus on the bolded parts. The question should be: What is the other spouse doing while the spouse in question is getting the kids ready for the events? My example used HHI as the metric by which this household could determine what is most important to it. I could rewrite the example, replacing "vascular surgeon" with "clergy member," and focus on spreading Christ's message on earth as the relevant metric (i.e., replacing household income). The question remains the same for the OP (i.e., was your DH doing something more important to your family while you were doing what you did). The point is not the example used. The point is that the information about what the other spouse was doing is essential, and we do not have it. You missed this point because you only read what you wanted to, so you could post about women making less money, etc. |
I don't disagree.
I'm sorry your husband is useless.
At least one poster was equating a one-and-done red dress to medical care. This is recklessly close enough to "everything is important".
We're advising OP to lighten the load. Let go of the one-and-done red dress "need"s.
The husband not taking ownership & and a spouse then "choosing" something does not automatically make something a necessity. She volunteered to burden herself with a task she decided was necessary, in an already over-burdened situation with a useless husband. It did not have to be necessary. I know. I've caroled without a one-and-done red dress. |
This It’s about giving a damn. And showing that you do. |
Lol |
And who is the arbiter of how to appropriately show you "give a damn"? Lemme guess: you? |
If you are senior and working 13 hours a day due to clients, you are not managing your team or resources well. Full stop. |
Nah. Just give them the keys to your house and emails and let them loose! Just make sure they are at least proficient in English. |
The "giving a damn" poster must be constantly disappointed in her husband. There is a zero chance it was a man's decision to insist on a red dress and cookies for caroling. If we're talking about giving a damn, the organizer should have taken into consideration how busy families are this time of year and made this as easy as possible. But that person doesn't seem to give much a damn about just getting the kids to show up without all this unnecessary stress. Why do we tolerate people making things harder than they need to be? |
I would recommend properly vetting. This is assuming one or both parents can provide financing and are capable of vetting. |
If you are a housewife complaining about your load and available time, you are not managing your house well. Full stop. |
NP. Yes those are OPs options. Coparenting with a loser is just more of the same or worse, especially for the kids and their future. They won’t be ready for school or tests or games, they’ll miss things, and their habits will devolve during his custody time. And Op will still have to be in charge of everything since he doesn’t care about dental appts, correct sports gear, bday parties, being on time, dress code, and so on. |
One theme seems to be "because my partner does not help". I don't see the logic here. |