And you have missed the beauty of a relationship. |
| It seems like a lot of people are viewing playing as the only option for interacting with your child. I firmly believe spending quality time is what is important and that this does not have to fall into the category of playing. I don’t know about OPs specific situation but, in general, I don’t think it’s necessary to play with your children as long as you spend quality time engaging with them in other ways (arts and crafts, reading, going on bike rides, etc). |
Uh cool…find me a person endorsing “avoiding interaction with your child until he turns two” and I’ll be sure to pass your message on. It’s completely irrelevant to this thread though. |
Of course playing isn't the only way iof interacting with your children, but that's not really what's being discussed here despite you and your supporters trying to twist that conversation that way, perhaps out of guilt. If your kid is happy doing crafts and hikes with you great! The point is to interact with your kids in a way they find meaningful, not you. So if your kid would find it more meaningful for you to sit and play a card game with them or trains or dollhouse etc for a little bit do that at least some of the time. The period of time they want to play with you us so friggin short. If your kid asks you to play a game with them and you refuse or sulk about it because you think it's boring you are an ass full stop. |
DP.. why do people always compare adult:adult relationship to adult:child relationship. Super weird and a bit creepy |
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If you have time and energy to play with your kids - great. Not all parents do. Many work 50-60 hours a week and are exhausted after work. They're focused on supporting the family, paying living expenses, homework, future investments, retirement, college funds (FYI, instate is now 30-40k and out of state is easily 70-80k).
Don't point the finger just because certain parents don't have time or energy to play with their kids. Not everyone is like you. |
Nice excuses here folks. Maybe you can get to know your kids when you retire. |
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Not like they were working 15 hour days across multiple shifts to make ends meet as a single parent.
Both are neglecting their kid(s). Happens across income and education strata. |
If you work that much, you should take extra care to spend meaningful time with your kids. I work insanely long hours (often) as a lawyer. So I make sure to set aside time to play games, read, go hiking, etc. Otherwise, I'd have no relationship with them! |