This. |
I guess it’s easier for you to think that than teach your children to be responsible and take on the task. I wonder how not doing the sign up means I’m avoiding interacting my child? |
Sounds like you married a dud. |
What is a parent’s responsibility with regard to the SAT? And did either of your parents carry that responsibility? |
My kids are at a private school in VA and I see a lot more dad participation there. No idea why that is versus what you see. |
That sucks. My husband fills out the aftercare and bus forms. I do the parent-teacher sign up but he is the one who puts the reminder in the calendar. |
My mom bought me a prep book, signed me up, told me to study, drove me there and back, and celebrated with me when I got my score back. |
I don’t know. It seems weird to me to not know if your child is planning to attend college. But you go ahead and leave it to your spouse. |
All already answered this: on-call if needed. My parents were not needed, but available if needed. |
I definitely do more admin work than my husband BUT he does more of other things. For example, my car registration is something he does, as he does everything related to all our cars. I'm not equating the two, I'm just saying that we have divided some things 50/50 (i.e. we are both responsible for certain items related to our children and house) and for other things we have divided them 100/0 where one of us is wholly responsible for that area. For example, he does all the electronics for everyone in the family, which includes all issues with phones, iPads, computers, laptops, TVs, WiFi, etc. If a child asks me for assistance because something isn't working on their phone, I send them to their dad. I do all the logistics related to our kids' shared sport because it's also my sport. My husband attends practices and competitions, but I buy all the items the kids need and stay on top of that. I could go on and on, but the two of us both work full time and have divided things up in a way that works for us. I do more admin but not all of it and he does more of other things. All that to say, I don't think saying you do more admin work is necessarily a problem. Now, if you do all of it despite asking your husband for help with it, or you do it in addition to everything else, then of course that's a problem. |
Just drop the rope and only do the things important to you. I stopped getting his family gifts for example, but I still get them for my parents, siblings, nieces and nephews. I do kids via delivery to the house. I hate cooking, so I don’t. We had nothing one year and had to go out because I said I wasn’t doing it anymore and he didn’t believe me. Now he organizes dinner. His family gets nothing from us (because he doesn’t plan it). Also, if he invites visitors, he’s responsible- one year I just went to the office everyday, so I wasn’t expected to cook or entertain. After that he got the message. Now he steps up. |
Same. I actually call this 50/50 because I’m a bulker not a splitter - on a whole it’s 50/50. Reality is he does all the home and garden maintenance and organization. I do all the kid shopping. We both do cooking, laundry. I organize the household help; he organizes the kids extracurriculars and school payments. We both work and are equals with our own specialties. |
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tell him you are not going to do it all. you all can get together and make a list and decide who is going to do what.
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A recurring issue is that's not an option. The husband is not changeable, so you need to change what is changeable. Unless it's not bothering you then change nothing. |
That's a copout. These are children and household related things that need to get done. DH doesn't get to say, "our household and kids need only the bare minimum, and no holiday observance" and call it a day. |