Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is being rude, but just give your kid an IPad or TV, and snack and tell them to be quiet.
OP… sure, for one day, knock yourself out on the iPad. But 2 days last week and 3 days this week… not so much
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your DH is being rude, but just give your kid an IPad or TV, and snack and tell them to be quiet.
OP… sure, for one day, knock yourself out on the iPad. But 2 days last week and 3 days this week… not so much
Anonymous wrote:Your DH is being rude, but just give your kid an IPad or TV, and snack and tell them to be quiet.
Anonymous wrote:What worked for us is to address the day in the morning and make a plan, 9-5, for who's available for child and when. "I'm booked for a 2pm and 3pm call" etc. It was the only way I found to get my spouse to treat my job as equal. We identify who is "on hand" for child at any given timeframe during the day, even if kid has an activity. That way expectations are set, meals are covered, and there's a point person for emergencies. It was unacceptable to me (and I communicated this to spouse) that we be ensconced in our ivory tower home offices all day when our kid is home.
You know your DH better than us, but to me, it sounds like he's gotten spoiled having the house to himself during the day.
Anonymous wrote:Put me in the camp of not wanting to normalize airing personal grievances with your spouse to strangers on the internet. Firmly believe we’d be a better society if people got professional, private, help rather than seeking sympathy from people they know will give it (all we have is your side after all), therefore - potentially irrationally - making the issue worse, not better.
Talk to a therapist.
Anonymous wrote:Does you kid have COVID? Why is she home? If she is vaccinated there is no reason she should be home unless she tests positive.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I would absolutely have a calm discussion about this. He sees your role as the sole caretaker of your child and doesn’t respect your job/career.