How Involved Is Your Husband With Parenting?

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s a long story, but when my kids were born, my dh was super hands on and involved. He literally could not have done much more for them. Over the years, he pulled back more and more. By the time the kids were out of the early elementary grades, dh provided all the financial support and I did all other aspects of parenting. I tried very hard, but couldn’t get him more involved.



Do you have any theories why he became less involved? Usually the early years are the most work and biggest adjustment so it’s interesting he jumped right in and then backed way off.


DP but I wonder if it's because "being involved" with elementary schoolers tends to entail stupid superficial tasks that men often (rightly) see as pointless. Like PTA, constant swim/dance/soccer practice (exercise and healthy competitiveness is great but why take it so seriously before high school/college?), decorating teacher cards for the holidays, play dates...etc. Moms tend to be harried and nitpicky about these things but dads don't.


Huh?

When you don’t talk to your own kids in any meaningful way, don’t ever go over homework or sports drills, or help them through friends or schools issues or instill healthy habits in them that’s Not Involved.

Not signing your kids up for ECs or participating in school traditions or poo poo-ing parent/school networks is different. Frankly the families where BOTH parents do that all, in addition to the above, have families and kids’ health and development light years ahead of families where one or both parents do not.
Anonymous
It that takes time, effort, energy and wherewithal. Not every parent has that.

Tradition take time and effort. Much easier to do nothing and make fun of things you don’t understand.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
I didn’t say that I was falling apart, only that I have emotions about my kids, and it can be exhausting not to have a spouse to share them with. Sometimes those feelings are feelings of joy or excitement or surprise.


I have lots of emotions about my kids. Just not about scheduling everyday stuff for them.

I don’t know why you are acting like you are in the ER and have to set emotion aside during the every day lives of your children.


Scheduling everyday stuff for kids is not at all like being an ER doc. Thank God! It's never a life-or-death decision. If I drop the ball and forget to schedule the summer tennis lessons, oh well, my bad, but ultimately that's no big deal. It's because these decisions are relatively unimportant in the grand scheme of things that I don't have strong emotions that I need to set aside or that exhaust me. It's also why I find it hard to understand people who do get exhausted about them.

On the few occasions when I've had to make serious medical decisions for my kids, I was not really anxious about the decision itself (often as not, it was just "do what the doc recommends") but was of course anxious that the procedure go well and the child make a full recovery.

The only emotions you seem to experience are anger at your ex-wife and some vague guilt about the divorce. Maybe your fear of being exhausted or being seen as weak is an issue?


(sigh) Whenever a man says anything that can be interpreted as critical of women, women accuse him of being "angry". No. I am not angry at her, even though she can't be relied on to schedule their activities or important appointments, and nothing happens unless I do it. Mostly this is because I know she is mentally ill, which is not her fault. Despite her illness, which likely made divorce inevitable no matter what I did, I know I was an imperfect husband. Yes, I do feel guilty that I didn't address my own issues during the marriage, and in that respect I failed myself, her, and my kids. During the lead-up to the divorce, I felt a great deal of stress and anxiety, mostly about how it would affect the kids. So you see, I am not an emotionless robot - and I got therapy to help me through it.

You should try being a little more vulnerable with your kids. Yes. It is exhausting. But kids are worth it.


Sorry, have to disagree. Kids expect their father to be a rock. If he displays weakness, it amplifies their fears and insecurities. They are looking at you, and if they see that daddy is calm, they think everything will be ok. Frankly, women are the same way. Whatever they may say about wanting men to show emotion and be vulnerable, in reality they want you to be unruffled and calm, especially in the face of adversity. A man has to keep his anxieties to himself, or pay a therapist to listen to them. Nobody else wants to hear it, least of all his woman and children.


Wow. You sure write a lot of long defensive emails that really spill the beans on your persona.

Are you ASD?
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