Anonymous wrote:Also, the fear that his child will become average is very destructive. This is a huge burden for her to bear, huge. Again, she's a child, not a project.
Anonymous wrote:...Your husband needs therapy but my guess is that he won't be open to this so you need to find a good therapist to advise you about navigating this problem. A therapist will help you find better approaches for dealing with him and ways you can protect your daughter. You may also enlist a child development expert. Perhaps you can find a child psychiatrist and tell you that you are going to have your daughter evaluated because she seems gifted, or something that will appeal to him. Privately tell the psychiatrist your concerns. These evaluations usually involve a meeting with both parents to discuss the recommendations. At which point there is no doubt that the psychiatrist will advise your husband -- with a medical degree and experience to back it up -- specifically why this load is unhealthy for your daughter. Perhaps he'll take it from an expert.
You are rather presumptious...have you ever been in therapy?
Yes, I have. I have a child with a disability which is a different situation but produces its own stresses on a marriage. It has been very helpful for me to get support and advice on how we can navigate our challenges together, as parents. So, I do think I bring some experience to the table here.
Enrichment is a wonderful thing but there has to be some proportion and understanding that children learn most through play. OP's situation is clearly unhealthy and causing problems in the marriage. I stand by my recommendation for therapy. The tensions will increase, the pressures on the child will increase and this marriage is already strained. OP recognizes this, which is a great thing. I think she needs professional help tackling it.
...Your husband needs therapy but my guess is that he won't be open to this so you need to find a good therapist to advise you about navigating this problem. A therapist will help you find better approaches for dealing with him and ways you can protect your daughter. You may also enlist a child development expert. Perhaps you can find a child psychiatrist and tell you that you are going to have your daughter evaluated because she seems gifted, or something that will appeal to him. Privately tell the psychiatrist your concerns. These evaluations usually involve a meeting with both parents to discuss the recommendations. At which point there is no doubt that the psychiatrist will advise your husband -- with a medical degree and experience to back it up -- specifically why this load is unhealthy for your daughter. Perhaps he'll take it from an expert.
You are rather presumptious...have you ever been in therapy?
A 4 year-old shouldn't have more than 1 to 2 a week. This is beyond excessive and could be damaging, if it is real. Its so extreme I even wonder if this post is real.
All of the activities will crowd out normal development. Your husband is turning your daughter into a project rather than a kid. My guess is that he's going to be competitive about her even more as she gets older. The fact that she 1 to 2 activities a day reflects a kind of compulsiveness that makes me wonder if he is suffering from some kind of mental illness. As she gets older its going to get worse because there will be more opportunities. She might make it through elementary school with this kind of schedule and pressure, but she won't make it much longer than that without something giving. I feel sorry for her.
Your husband needs therapy but my guess is that he won't be open to this so you need to find a good therapist to advise you about navigating this problem. A therapist will help you find better approaches for dealing with him and ways you can protect your daughter. You may also enlist a child development expert. Perhaps you can find a child psychiatrist and tell you that you are going to have your daughter evaluated because she seems gifted, or something that will appeal to him. Privately tell the psychiatrist your concerns. These evaluations usually involve a meeting with both parents to discuss the recommendations. At which point there is no doubt that the psychiatrist will advise your husband -- with a medical degree and experience to back it up -- specifically why this load is unhealthy for your daughter. Perhaps he'll take it from an expert.
Please don't just let this go because it will get worse as she gets older and you need to protect her.
No one can legislate or even prescribe (like the PP) what is appropriate for a given child or family unit. There is so much variability from child to child -- based on DNA, biology, culture, language, religion, household, income, domicile, family and social network. In some families, both parents have time consuming occupations and therefore much of the activities for the children are highly organized, regulated and outsourced. In other family units, there is extensive parental presence, and or extended family presence, in the home and "enrichment" for the child is more "local" and familial.