Not sure these guys are talking about their feelings and nurturing each other while on a bender in Vegas. |
I know that I am nurturing myself and my friendships when I spend a long weekend at a resort drinking mimosas and wine all day with my friends once a year. Does the fact that it is dudes, hard liquor and LV really make a difference? |
DP. I agree it’d be a turn off but if just once or twice a year I’d deal. This is assuming alcohol is not otherwise an issue in our marriage. That said I’m SO glad the guys’ trips my DH goes on are with other married dads and they do stuff like skiing, hiking, etc. They like to go on nature trips vs boozing vacations. Also, sometimes they take the kids with them to go on camping trips. I take girls’ trips too. Usually for a spa weekend or to a fun city to see shows/eat at cool restaurants. |
+1 The people who call this bean counting are the ones who always take a mile when given an inch, and then accuse their partners of being petty when their partners ask for the same consideration. |
I would argue better friendships would not involve just getting drunk all weekend. Can they not enjoy each other’s company without getting drunk to the point of a multi day hangover? |
JFC. Marriage sounds absolutely miserable. And I’m a woman. |
It is if you’re a woman. The institution is for the man’s benefit. Just read the thread. |
+1 Correct. A lot of PPs above (men who want their own guys' trips, I suspect) are ignoring the fact that the real problem isn't the trip itself, it's that he comes home and is a hungover mopey baby for days afterward, recovering because he can't drink like an adult when he's away. OP, I'd schedule utterly un-cancel-able things for which he has to be responsible so he has to suck it up and take a kid to, say, the dentist at 8 a.m. on that first morning back because YOU are busy. I'd have stuff of my own scheduled so he has to be the one getting the kids up and off to school. And I wouldn't be passive-aggressive about it -- I'd tell him point blank that family life goes on whether he's hung over and grumpy or not, and if he can't drink like a grown-up, that's his issue to figure out, not his issue to bring home with him. |
Groups of guys obviously differ. And, while we're not exactly "nurturing," my group opens up about stuff in these settings in ways we usually don't when there is less alcohol, less time together, and more routine. |
I dont think every marriage is misseable but some of us get stuck raising the husband. Im not saying dont go out but be mature know your limits. |
Can't speak for OP's husband, but for my group there was a transition period where we adjusted to the fact that we couldn't go as hard without being worthless for longer stretches of time. When we were in our twenties, we could get raging drunk and bounce back fast. There was a stretch in our thirties where we got just as drunk but it took a few days to get back up to snuff. (I'm not talking about being confined to bed or anything - just a little slower, a little foggier.) Now that we're in our fifties, we get a good buzz on, but we're probably asleep by midnight. |
Let me guess. He also works full time and pays for everything while you stay at home? And you can't give him TWO WEEKENDS A FREAKING YEAR to relax? Who is the unreasonable one... |
OP - I have not responded to every comment but will respond to this one. I too work full time and make decent money (although he makes more than me by quite a bit). I provide our family with health insurance, have a healthy pension AND am the full time default parent for 3 young kids. |
I get that this is frustrating, but if he's just checking out of the morning routine 3-4 days a year (a couple of days after each trip), you're going to have to let it go. Once he's over the hangover tell him he's got the next couple of days alone (to reconnect with the kids!). Go on your own trip. Make like Elsa and let it goooooooooooooo. |
You only hear about the bad stuff on this forum. I'm very happily married. |