Anonymous wrote:You need a lawyer and financial divorce planner. You'll need to convince a judge to impute earning capacity to him so you don't have to support him long term. You will lose your assets but it's worth it to be rid of a man-baby.
Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
Anonymous wrote:I have ADHD and am in charge of all of this stuff. Honestly, it doesn’t all get done and life goes on. Kids show up in uniforms on school picture day. I get an email from the school nurse and have to run kids to the drug store after school to get vaccines. Just this past weekend, I had a kid miss a rehearsal for the school play. I feel like I can keep on top of 90% of it (vet for the dog, meds, doctors, dentist, orthodontist, activity fees, mandatory volunteer hours, lacrosse sticks, mouthguards, what day the gym uniform needs to be clean, taxes, oil changes, ingredients for breakfast lunch and dinner, etc.), but the 10% I miss always feels like a failure.
It sucks, and I hate myself for it. I’m glad my spouse doesn’t hate me too.
Anonymous wrote:In the same boat. I'm just trying to make enough money that I can outsource everything and have the option for a divorce. I also try to put him in situations where he has no choice but to deal. It's the only way to force him to engage. For example, if I sit down with him and explain that I need him to handle the kids on a weekday morning because I need to work, he will yes me to death and then simply not do it and the consequences fall on me. BUT, if I leave the house before the kids wake up, then he has NO CHOICE but to get up with them and get them off to school. This strategy can't ever result in actual equity, BUT it can ensure that the structure of the situation compels him to act, rather than me trying to use words to compel him to act which has never worked ever.