Like if OP asked her neighbor to pick up some candy to fill eggs with, and he waited two weeks, gave her candy from the checkout counter, and was mad that she didn’t use it? I think she would probably feel like he was a weird dude and annoyed that he was mad. I doubt that she would be looking to date him. |
Define "random candy". Would it be random to offer a regular snickers for Halloween? We do this regularly so I suppose this makes us bad parents. How do you know OPs husband purchased the candy "from the checkout counter"? Did you stalk him, or are you making this up to fit your bizarre narrative? |
Our family does not like holiday themed candy. We like the regular candy we get. Those marshmallow confection Peeps (which would meet the criteria of the OP apologists) would go directly into the trash, and we'd reach for a normal chocolate bar. Dark preferably. But milk choco would be fine. |
Imagine posting a totally unhelpful reply simply to display your juvenile level of snobbery. |
The neighbor scenario is stupid, not talking about that. Just generally. if you don't get your kids the "good" candy for a religious holiday none of you celebrate, does that make him a bad husband or just a bad dad? OPs argument is he's a bad dad for not doing this b/c it's the kids who have been whipped up into a frenzy over this by, presumably, OP. Does that make him a bad husband? |
People are painting you as the bad guy because you asked your spouse to do an opposite gender task, and they are assuming that he got the wrong thing because he was incompetent, not because he was being passive aggressive. |
I think that not getting your wife the candy she asked for makes you a bad husband. |
*ding! ding! ding!* |
What about if the husband disagreed and voiced his disapproval? He should just cave and do as she demands? Why doesn't that make her a bad wife? |
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No. She is a bad guy because she overruled her husband’s view on to celebrate (or not). And then assigned him a task for thing he said they shouldn’t do. |
Yep. She said she didn't care how he felt and needed to do this anyway. So loving. So kind. |
Imagine being so obsessed with holiday themed novelty candy you get triggered over other people disagreeing with your preference. |
+Yes Considering this, husband bought candy as part of his grocery shopping routine. Then wife is upset he didn't shop at the right time (not her decision) and he didn't buy the right candy (also not her decision) and that he does nothing (false by her own account). |
Yes he should cave. No. This doesn’t make her a bad wife. Try switching the genders. If he asked her to pick up some Irish beer for St Patrick’s day, and she came home with Amstel and said that celebrating St Patrick’s Day is stupid, would that make him a bad husband? |
I’m all about men being the leaders in their family. But if his view on this is that strong, then he should have told their kids why he feels this way, and he should have told his wife that he wouldn’t get the candy at all. Being passive aggressive and making your wife into the bad guy isn’t how you lead your family. |