Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been working through similar issues and you are wrong. It undermines him as a parent.
I know that’s how DH feels but I’m having a hard time understanding why this undermines him as a parent.
I did not ask in front of the kid. Kid was not upset in response to a consequence. He was just super tired at the end of a long day and lost it (which is not developmentally inappropriate for a kindergartener). Nothing I did contradicted anything DH said or did with the kids. He said good night to the crying child, and I went in, spent a little more time with him so he calmed down, and he went to sleep.
DH basically told me, I want you to let our kid cry by himself in bed, which seems unfair.
It undermines him as a parent because you're clearly showing him that you are going to override his parenting decisions whenever you feel like it. He feels undermined in his relationship with you. It doesn't matter if the kid heard or knows. It's undermining between him and you.
You didn't even discuss it with him, you just ignored what he said and overrode him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been working through similar issues and you are wrong. It undermines him as a parent.
I know that’s how DH feels but I’m having a hard time understanding why this undermines him as a parent.
I did not ask in front of the kid. Kid was not upset in response to a consequence. He was just super tired at the end of a long day and lost it (which is not developmentally inappropriate for a kindergartener). Nothing I did contradicted anything DH said or did with the kids. He said good night to the crying child, and I went in, spent a little more time with him so he calmed down, and he went to sleep.
DH basically told me, I want you to let our kid cry by himself in bed, which seems unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have been working through similar issues and you are wrong. It undermines him as a parent.
I know that’s how DH feels but I’m having a hard time understanding why this undermines him as a parent.
I did not ask in front of the kid. Kid was not upset in response to a consequence. He was just super tired at the end of a long day and lost it (which is not developmentally inappropriate for a kindergartener). Nothing I did contradicted anything DH said or did with the kids. He said good night to the crying child, and I went in, spent a little more time with him so he calmed down, and he went to sleep.
DH basically told me, I want you to let our kid cry by himself in bed, which seems unfair.
Anonymous wrote:Why did you bother asking? Ignore his response and then not understand his frustration? Sounds controlling to me.
Anonymous wrote:We have been working through similar issues and you are wrong. It undermines him as a parent.
Anonymous wrote:DH was doing bedtime with overtired 6 year old who ended up in a total meltdown, as it happens with overtired children. DH attempted to comfort DS for a little while, then went to our older child (they share a room) for their end of night conversation/cuddle, leaving DS sobbing. I texted to see if I could come in, and said it was really hard to keep listening to DS cry. DH responded no, but I went in anyway, and rubbed DS’s back until he eventually calmed down.
DH is furious because he said no and I did it anyway, and because I didn’t leave him alone during bedtime.
I fully admit I did both of these things. However, I think it’s weird and controlling for one parent to tell the other to stay away from an upset child.
We’ve been to therapy. He changed a lot of his parenting approaches that I found really troubling, and I’ve really stepped back and let him handle things without interfering. Clearly we both still have work to do.
What I want to know is, in partnerships where you feel like things are good and you trust your partner to handle the kids, does your partner ever say no, you can’t come comfort a crying kid? And beyond that, would you ask, or just enter the room?
Anonymous wrote:Why did you bother asking? Ignore his response and then not understand his frustration? Sounds controlling to me.