Anonymous wrote:Your kid is a premie?
You both put on your big kid underpants and realize this is a difficult time.
No one know the right thing to do yet. Just give yourself both time. You gave birth and he's just seen you go through labor and now has a kid who came early. Focus on getting to a stable time.
It's your hormones talking. It's unlikely that you damaged your marriage irreparably.
Anonymous wrote:For me it was a frank conversation to my H that you are also a parent just like me. We are equal. I do not want to delegate tasks day and night. Stop asking if something needs to be done and just think for yourself what needs to be done- laundry, washing bottles, changing diapers, meal prep, take out dirty diapers, restock nursery, etc. This is life now and I'm figuring it out and you need to as well.
Are you and your DH equals in terms of childcare? Nope.
Did you ever "correct" him by telling him he needed to do X___ in a manner you suggested or offer him advice on how to wash bottles, change diapers, etc.? IME, the DW believes she is in charge because she is the mother. Fair. But the "you are a parent just like me" translates into "I want you to do things how I think they should be done." Which is okay; however, you cannot pretend that you are equals on one hand and review his work on the other.
And, yes, I am speaking from experience.
Anonymous wrote:By giving him space to parent without gatekeeping. Are you nursing? If so, get in the regular habit of nursing then immediately handing the baby to dad until then next feeding. Let him handle diapering, playing, and getting baby down for a nap. Not all the time, but regularly. If you’re both home full time right now, you should be doing that like half the time.
If you’re not nursing, even easier. Give him the baby for 4-6 hours. Leave the house!
He’s feeling left out and pushed away. The way you fix that is to bring him in.
Anonymous wrote:Sounds like this is your first kid? If so, you're both in a whole new world so you have to cut each other lots of slack. I'd apologize for hurting him and share that you're learning too and don't really know how he can be helpful yet. Suggest taking 15 minutes to brainstorm together things he can own. Example - put him in charge of everything related to meals (planning, shopping, cooking, clean up). That plus all the newborn laundry and a night time feeding is a whole job.
If there isn't much he can do (doubtful), then maybe he'll realize that he should structure his leave differently. Could be be three days at work and 2 off? That way you get some space while you care for the baby but also some relief when he can tap in while you get to take a real break or get out of the house alone?
Anonymous wrote:By giving him space to parent without gatekeeping. Are you nursing? If so, get in the regular habit of nursing then immediately handing the baby to dad until then next feeding. Let him handle diapering, playing, and getting baby down for a nap. Not all the time, but regularly. If you’re both home full time right now, you should be doing that like half the time.
If you’re not nursing, even easier. Give him the baby for 4-6 hours. Leave the house!
He’s feeling left out and pushed away. The way you fix that is to bring him in.
Anonymous wrote:For me it was a frank conversation to my H that you are also a parent just like me. We are equal. I do not want to delegate tasks day and night. Stop asking if something needs to be done and just think for yourself what needs to be done- laundry, washing bottles, changing diapers, meal prep, take out dirty diapers, restock nursery, etc. This is life now and I'm figuring it out and you need to as well.
For me it was a frank conversation to my H that you are also a parent just like me. We are equal. I do not want to delegate tasks day and night. Stop asking if something needs to be done and just think for yourself what needs to be done- laundry, washing bottles, changing diapers, meal prep, take out dirty diapers, restock nursery, etc. This is life now and I'm figuring it out and you need to as well.