Anonymous wrote:My Dh does this. The problem is that he never builds in reciprocal time for me to see my family, and if I push back against the burden it puts on me he plays the “but I have to see my father” card like yours is. Often DH tacks visits on to the beginning or end of work trips that require a Sunday flight overseas so he’ll miss an entire weekend of family time.
In my Dh’s mind, since many of these added-on visits are last-minute, they don’t really exist or have an impact.
It is a huge issue- he think it represents him being a good person but I can see that he’s being it as optics and it’s representative of how he consistently ducks obligations to our family.
I think you need to zoom out and look at whether this is representative of other patterns in your relationship and how Dh prioritizes your family, your time, and your labor. Only then can you really know if this is an issue.
Anonymous wrote:My spouse's father is in assited living in Richmond. He moved in last May. We are in Bethesda.
Every other Sunday since that time, my spouses leaves here around 9am drives to Richmond, visits their father,l often taking him to unch and drives back here, arriving home around 3 or 4.
All of the other Sunday chores -laundry, grocery shopping meal prep for the week, cleaning etc fall on me. We have two dogs, a cat, two kids ages 4 and 7 and it's dawning on me that this isn't really 'fair.' When I brought this up the response was "Because I have to visit my father". Like that obligated me to be a quasi single parent?
I've tried to move the shopping and cleaning to other nights of the week but it just doesn't stick. We both have busy schedules, long commutes, our eldest plays soccer, etc.
We've talked about hiring out the stuff we can but neither of us likes having a stranger in the house and we are both pretty picky about our produce so Insta cart is a non starter.
I guess what bothers me most is their refusal to admit that I'm the one being shafted in this arrangement.
Please give me helpful suggestions.
Anonymous wrote:The pickiness over Instacart and cleaners is ridiculous and y'all need to get over that. You seriously don't want him to visit his father, who may pass soon, because you don't want less-than-perfect apples?
He has to do half of the chores before he goes to see dad. If his solution is Instacart, let him do Instacart. This isn't that difficult.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would support my husband doing this, but then he'd also support me doing something for myself on the alternate weekends. He'd also potentially take the kid(s) sometimes. And/or do some of the Sunday prep on Saturday.
I'd also say you have to be ruthless in your priorities matching your values. You can't have everything. It doesn't actually make sense at least to me to say we have to pick our own produce over him visiting his Dad. Dad trumps produce in my values. It's not that ideally I don't want to pick the produce, it's that you have to admit you can't have everything/everything cannot be optimized all the time.
Anonymous wrote:I would support my husband doing this, but then he'd also support me doing something for myself on the alternate weekends. He'd also potentially take the kid(s) sometimes. And/or do some of the Sunday prep on Saturday.
Anonymous wrote:I would support my husband doing this, but then he'd also support me doing something for myself on the alternate weekends. He'd also potentially take the kid(s) sometimes. And/or do some of the Sunday prep on Saturday.
Anonymous wrote:Op, you're a pretty awful human being.