Anonymous wrote:First, calm down. I understand that you are frustrated, but getting angry at him will not help.
This is not -- or should not -- be a "you and the kids" versus "me and the kids" situation. Nor should it be an "I make the decisions" and that's what we all do scenario. You are a family. You and DH are a team. You work together, you compromise, you figure out something. It will not be 100% perfect or exactly what either of you want, but that's the beauty of it. If either of you had wanted to make your own independent decisions about your time, you should have stayed single.
So in this situation, I would go to DH and say, "Look. I know you have to work this weekend. I get that." Maybe he is behind in his work, feeling anxious about it and thinks being in the office for a day or so when no one else is there will help him catch up and feel more secure. My DH does that all the time.
"But," you say, "can we find a compromise?" Can we take an overnight on Saturday, say, or promise to do something fun as a family all day on Sunday? You figure out something that will work within those time frames and any budget constraints.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. He is stressed out about work and I can understand why he's thinking that a couple of hours at the office out of the long weekend is not a big deal, because he has four days off. So a few hours out of four days seems like no big deal to him.
But here's his history: "I want to do fun stuff with the kids. I don't want to miss out. Why do you get to do fun stuff with the kids?" Well, I get to do fun stuff with the kids because (1) I make plans to do so and (2) I execute those plans. I am flexible enough that I can decide that if my ideal scenario is three hours at the office on Saturday morning, I can adjust my thinking and understand that three hours on Sunday afternoon would be fine as well, and would mean that the rest of the family doesn't have to limit their plans to fit around my fixed idea.
This is the same person who says "I need to spend more one on one time with [kid]" but never, ever makes an effort to do anything along those lines, but gets resentful when I do because then he's missing out. The net result: whole family misses out because he doesn't want to.
Anonymous wrote:First, calm down. I understand that you are frustrated, but getting angry at him will not help.
This is not -- or should not -- be a "you and the kids" versus "me and the kids" situation. Nor should it be an "I make the decisions" and that's what we all do scenario. You are a family. You and DH are a team. You work together, you compromise, you figure out something. It will not be 100% perfect or exactly what either of you want, but that's the beauty of it. If either of you had wanted to make your own independent decisions about your time, you should have stayed single.
So in this situation, I would go to DH and say, "Look. I know you have to work this weekend. I get that." Maybe he is behind in his work, feeling anxious about it and thinks being in the office for a day or so when no one else is there will help him catch up and feel more secure. My DH does that all the time.
"But," you say, "can we find a compromise?" Can we take an overnight on Saturday, say, or promise to do something fun as a family all day on Sunday? You figure out something that will work within those time frames and any budget constraints.
Anonymous wrote:It's a holiday weekend, that's fishy he wants to work instead of spending time with his family.