Correct. Doing a day trip with a visit and lunch from Bethesda to Richmond is a hell of alot longer than 7 hours. Plus- I cant be the only one that took 'every other Sunday' to mean every Sunday since the FIL went into AL. I read the 'every' as an emphasis on every Sunday, not meanig they went one week, then not the next. Like it was synonomous with "All the Sundays since" OP can come back and clarify please? |
So basically you don’t want us to take OP’s post as written so you can continue to slam her DH for seeing his father? Uh, ok, You don’t sound like you have an ax to grind at all. |
| I think most of the responses are missing the point. OP didn't say they can't do this stuff. They are just miffed they are being assigned this new life without discussion with their spouse, or seeming acknowledgement from their spouse. I agree that would suck and i'd be annoyed too. |
Well, first I'd get out of the mindset that you are the one being shafted. You are and it's frustrating that it's not appreciated, but this is also a stage of life that all/almost all of use will go through and I am sure you would like to be able to do the same for your loved ones, or if you need care and downtime from health issues at some point. So what to do? Solve the problem. Get groceries delivered. Simplify meals. Get cleaners. If you have cleaners ask them to wash the sheets and towels during their visit. Send more things out for dry cleaning. Assign spouse car pool duty during the week. Teach older kids to do their own laundry. Stop waiting for the recognition and problem solve. If spouse asks why X is happening, be nice but explain that you needed to make some changes in order to be able to support his weekly trips to see his dad. I just think letting your resentment fester over this is toxic for the marriage in the long run. |
I think you need to rehome your two dogs and cats. And adjust your thinking and mindset. Yes, he needs to visit his father, and you actually have it easy that he is taking care of his dad, and it is not on you. Get a cleaning person and adjust your expectations. Because, the way you are thinking - you are the problem. And where you are in your life, more challenges are natural to follow. |
Actually she did say she can’t do this stuff. Instacart is a non-starter. |
Wow! Tell us the name of the ASL, because some people deteriorate fast under the "loving" care of their children and their spouses. |
Seems reasonable. OP: Someday you, too, will also be old and in need of family. Your spouse is a good person doing the right thing. Would be better if spouse could take the children once a month, but is that feasible ? How much care does father-in-law require ? Can spouse handle kids & father ? OP: Do you have relatives nearby so the kids could visit with them ? |
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Something practical you could do if he's never going to take the kids with him is Sunday afternoon becomes movie day for the kids while you clean and prep.
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OP here.
It's my wife visiting her dad. And yes it is every Sunday. I meant it has been every other Sunday we have had since May. I know it is the stage of life because I see it all round us with our friends. My parents died when I was young (mother at 14, father at 25) so this sin't something my wife has had to accomodate, or ever will. Honestly, just the recognition that I'm rowing the boat for her while she deals with her dad is all I'm looking for. |
This. I mean, if he suck that bad, divorce him. Then you can truly understand what not having a co-parent is actually like. |
When I was in elementary school 9-3 was 6 hours and 6 times 2 (the number of times he is going a month) is 12. Now there will be a few months where he goes 3 times and some trips seem to be 7 hours, so it’s a range of 12 - 21 hours. |
+1 DH and I, routinely help my ILs and an aunt, to maintain their grooming, maintain the house and yard, have family get-togethers in their space so that they remain healthy and capable to live in their own house for as long as they can with independence, joy and dignity. OP needs to applaud your DH for being a good son. As a spouse, she need to support him and also be a flexible thinker. If OP cannot solve some logistical problems at home (when she has the money to do so) then she must be really an incompetent person. Life is always changing. This is the season for change. Also, I am always amazed how people are mean to their ILs and put up roadblocks in their care. How can your spouse respect you if you are such a beetch? |
No. You do not understand anything. The adult child may not have the bandwidth and time to help with the chores and therefore you need to outsource stuff. Which you are refusing to do. What is wrong with you? Also, get rid of your pets. |
Okay, but just remember: you asked for this. 1) Stop being a whiner. The victimese in your post is pathetic. Fortify yourself and act like an adult with agency, because that's what you are. Nobody's "shafting" you. 2) Get off your high horse about strangers in the house and your precious produce and hire help. Be grateful you can afford this instead of nitpicking a viable solution. You're in your own way, shafting yourself on this front. Stop that. 3) Learn how to operate a family calendar, and stick to it. "it just doesn't stick" is passive. "I didn't stick to it" is more likely, and you need to be responsible for solving your problem and not waiting and whining until someone solves it for you. Get your shit together. If it doesn't fit perfectly the first time, try again until it does. 4) Stop complaining. Truly. Go 30 days without fixing your face to complain. For every time you want to whinge and whine about how "shafted" you feel, flip it. Your spouse gives a fsck about his aging parent, and you admire and respect his compassion and dedication to his family. You can afford to pay someone to do your grocery shopping and housekeeping. Your kid is healthy and able-bodied enough to play a sport. Immediately remove the idea that you're a single parent from your wee little head, because you probably wouldn't last a week, hunty. Instead, you need to get some damned gratitude for your petty little shite problem(s). 5) which is really 4(a) Fsck "fair". Life ain't fair. You've got it SO much better than so many people! Someone would be delighted to have your problems. Lots of someones, in fact. You don't actually want fair, Veruca. You just want what you want when you want it. Get over it. Buy yourself the help you need, including a therapist if you need help wrapping your head around those suggestions, and STFU. |