Feeling Trapped In Parenthood/Relationship

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would have happily let my husband take the baby for a week without me. Sounds like it's toddler age not a newborn. I would have loved a break from my kid at that age (or really any age)! Your wife sounds kind of anxious and honestly not very compassionate given that your mom is has a terminal illness.


I wouldn’t.
Sounds like the toddler is in day care so Dad suddenly being a primary caregiver of an 18 mos old or whatever who is jetlagged, still on bottled milk and purées and in diapers is not easy.
My spouse could not and would not do it, maybe he’d underestimate it as easy but truth is it is not easy. He’s probably dump the upset kid on the first anutie or nurse he saw.
Even packing for such a baby’s trip or the actual airport/airplane/car seat debacle is not easy.

Is this an emerging market country? Do they have the same formula available? Require car seats? Can you drink the tap water when making formula? Will they respect the child’s diet or try out new spices and see what happens?

Maybe the mother can join with the baby for one of the weeks. Am still assuming this is a transatlantic or trans-north pole flight for the child and yourselves.


Who is making formula for an 18-month old?
Anonymous
Single mom and MD here, I’ve had a nanny since DD was an infant. There’s no other way to do it unless you’ve got rock solid day time hours and can leave work if daycare calls, hence none of my colleagues use daycare.

OP the PPs pointing out that you aren’t trapped are correct. Get some help for your wife and kiddo and go see your mom. Your need to “want it how you want it” and somehow make this your wife’s fault for not simply acquiescing is concerning.
Anonymous
ETA I’m an ER doc and my hours are all over the place. My Nanny is spending the night tonight and will come in three days from five in the morning to do drop off at school. These folks are out there but they’re not going to come knock on your door.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would have happily let my husband take the baby for a week without me. Sounds like it's toddler age not a newborn. I would have loved a break from my kid at that age (or really any age)! Your wife sounds kind of anxious and honestly not very compassionate given that your mom is has a terminal illness.


I wouldn’t.
Sounds like the toddler is in day care so Dad suddenly being a primary caregiver of an 18 mos old or whatever who is jetlagged, still on bottled milk and purées and in diapers is not easy.
My spouse could not and would not do it, maybe he’d underestimate it as easy but truth is it is not easy. He’s probably dump the upset kid on the first anutie or nurse he saw.
Even packing for such a baby’s trip or the actual airport/airplane/car seat debacle is not easy.

Is this an emerging market country? Do they have the same formula available? Require car seats? Can you drink the tap water when making formula? Will they respect the child’s diet or try out new spices and see what happens?

Maybe the mother can join with the baby for one of the weeks. Am still assuming this is a transatlantic or trans-north pole flight for the child and yourselves.


Who is making formula for an 18-month old?


Day care worker or someone’s pumping and freezing and sending it in.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would have happily let my husband take the baby for a week without me. Sounds like it's toddler age not a newborn. I would have loved a break from my kid at that age (or really any age)! Your wife sounds kind of anxious and honestly not very compassionate given that your mom is has a terminal illness.


I wouldn’t.
Sounds like the toddler is in day care so Dad suddenly being a primary caregiver of an 18 mos old or whatever who is jetlagged, still on bottled milk and purées and in diapers is not easy.
My spouse could not and would not do it, maybe he’d underestimate it as easy but truth is it is not easy. He’s probably dump the upset kid on the first anutie or nurse he saw.
Even packing for such a baby’s trip or the actual airport/airplane/car seat debacle is not easy.

Is this an emerging market country? Do they have the same formula available? Require car seats? Can you drink the tap water when making formula? Will they respect the child’s diet or try out new spices and see what happens?

Maybe the mother can join with the baby for one of the weeks. Am still assuming this is a transatlantic or trans-north pole flight for the child and yourselves.


Who is making formula for an 18-month old?


Day care worker or someone’s pumping and freezing and sending it in.


AT EIGHTEEN MONTHS?
Anonymous
You need to just grab the bull by the horns and get help - whether by finding a sitter the grassroots way or calling up an agency and paying premium for a few weeks. Neither of you can do it all when the other is away. Given you have two young kids the likelihood of one of the kids getting sick while you are gone is also there. Having backup care is practical.

All the posters posting that the mom is a wimp or whatever - seriously shut up. Everywhere around the world and since the beginning of time parents have had extra help caring for kids. Throw in a career and suddenly a mom is a wimp for not being able to shoulder it all on her own. This is BS and such toxic messaging to married couples. Raising kids is hard and getting help doesn’t make one an incapable or incompetent parent. What it does do is make people feel inadequate, anxious and scared to ask for help. I want to raise kids who are humble and willing to get help when they need
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would have happily let my husband take the baby for a week without me. Sounds like it's toddler age not a newborn. I would have loved a break from my kid at that age (or really any age)! Your wife sounds kind of anxious and honestly not very compassionate given that your mom is has a terminal illness.


I wouldn’t.
Sounds like the toddler is in day care so Dad suddenly being a primary caregiver of an 18 mos old or whatever who is jetlagged, still on bottled milk and purées and in diapers is not easy.
My spouse could not and would not do it, maybe he’d underestimate it as easy but truth is it is not easy. He’s probably dump the upset kid on the first anutie or nurse he saw.
Even packing for such a baby’s trip or the actual airport/airplane/car seat debacle is not easy.

Is this an emerging market country? Do they have the same formula available? Require car seats? Can you drink the tap water when making formula? Will they respect the child’s diet or try out new spices and see what happens?

Maybe the mother can join with the baby for one of the weeks. Am still assuming this is a transatlantic or trans-north pole flight for the child and yourselves.


Who is making formula for an 18-month old?


Day care worker or someone’s pumping and freezing and sending it in.


AT EIGHTEEN MONTHS?


Lots of kids are still on formula or breast milk at 18 mos. Not 100% whole milk from cows. All are good for brain and body development.
In addition to their purées, cereal and banana bites.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I would have happily let my husband take the baby for a week without me. Sounds like it's toddler age not a newborn. I would have loved a break from my kid at that age (or really any age)! Your wife sounds kind of anxious and honestly not very compassionate given that your mom is has a terminal illness.


I wouldn’t.
Sounds like the toddler is in day care so Dad suddenly being a primary caregiver of an 18 mos old or whatever who is jetlagged, still on bottled milk and purées and in diapers is not easy.
My spouse could not and would not do it, maybe he’d underestimate it as easy but truth is it is not easy. He’s probably dump the upset kid on the first anutie or nurse he saw.
Even packing for such a baby’s trip or the actual airport/airplane/car seat debacle is not easy.

Is this an emerging market country? Do they have the same formula available? Require car seats? Can you drink the tap water when making formula? Will they respect the child’s diet or try out new spices and see what happens?

Maybe the mother can join with the baby for one of the weeks. Am still assuming this is a transatlantic or trans-north pole flight for the child and yourselves.


Who is making formula for an 18-month old?


Real tangential response PP.
But all the lactose intolerant toddler parents surely are.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.


Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.


Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!

This is so dumb.
OP’s mother is not a rock that can just be put into a bag and hauled anywhere someone else decides. Has it occurred to any of you that she might prefer living in her native country? People who are not immigrants are really clueless.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.


Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!


Exactly why the elderly parent pull-in waits by green card and new citizens are 20+ years long for many countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, UK, all of Central America, etc. Foreigners are advised to put their parents on the USA immigration list the minute the adult children get their green cards or citizenship. or turn 18 yo if born here.

Very common immigration tactic. But the wait is very long. Maybe the emergency angle would help but America and its health care system and hospitals cannot serve all current immigrants sickly and diseased parents to come here and get free treatment. And it is free to them; they themselves paid in nothing to the system over the years. Not via income tax, property tax, sales tax, Medicaid, SS, etc. Net negative
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.


Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!


Yours assuming she has no spouse, relatives, or adult children or even community support in her homeland.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can you apply for an emergency Green Card and insurance,and bring your mom to the US? Why is she even in a foreign country?


Bet he’d hire a caretaker for his mom in a flash. And at USA prices, $25-30 per hour.


Actually, home aid care is covered by Medicaid if his mom has no other income in the US. It's his fault that 1) he left his mother abroad and sick 2) now they obviously need a live-in nanny since both are working - his wife appears cold but she's right by at large!


Exactly why the elderly parent pull-in waits by green card and new citizens are 20+ years long for many countries like India, Pakistan, Mexico, UK, all of Central America, etc. Foreigners are advised to put their parents on the USA immigration list the minute the adult children get their green cards or citizenship. or turn 18 yo if born here.

Very common immigration tactic. But the wait is very long. Maybe the emergency angle would help but America and its health care system and hospitals cannot serve all current immigrants sickly and diseased parents to come here and get free treatment. And it is free to them; they themselves paid in nothing to the system over the years. Not via income tax, property tax, sales tax, Medicaid, SS, etc. Net negative

This is not correct.
Foreign parents of US citizens are considered immediate relatives and there is no waiting time for the green card. The 10-20 year wait lists are for the foreign siblings of US citizens.
Anonymous
OP,

Hire some help for your wife. There are people out there.

Go visit your Mom for 4 weeks.

We have a family leave act in the US which allows you to take up to 6 months off to care for family if you work for a company of over 50 employees.
post reply Forum Index » Relationship Discussion (non-explicit)
Message Quick Reply
Go to: