Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Would you tell a woman the same thing. I work 14-15 hours days, see my kids on weekends only (when not traveling) and enjoy every minute of it.
That's SO sad...
Anonymous wrote:Would you tell a woman the same thing. I work 14-15 hours days, see my kids on weekends only (when not traveling) and enjoy every minute of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That would be a big fight in my household. That’s a joint decision.
Is it possible that the status quo (or stepping down for better balance) are not real possibilities for him career wise? Not because of want but because those jobs don’t exist or won’t pay for your life? Because otherwise at least for us that wouldn’t be a unilateral decision.
So glad I'm not married to you.
Anonymous wrote:Would you tell a woman the same thing. I work 14-15 hours days, see my kids on weekends only (when not traveling) and enjoy every minute of it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That would be a big fight in my household. That’s a joint decision.
Is it possible that the status quo (or stepping down for better balance) are not real possibilities for him career wise? Not because of want but because those jobs don’t exist or won’t pay for your life? Because otherwise at least for us that wouldn’t be a unilateral decision.
+1. Decisions that affect the family, are family decisions. He is putting a strain on your relationship and foisting household responsibilities onto you, even though you work too. You need to at least say this to him. Personally I found couples counseling helpful.
+10. You need couples counseling. I know it doesn't feel like a relationship issue, it feels like a work issue - but it's not. It's primarily a disagreement about how to structure your lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That would be a big fight in my household. That’s a joint decision.
Is it possible that the status quo (or stepping down for better balance) are not real possibilities for him career wise? Not because of want but because those jobs don’t exist or won’t pay for your life? Because otherwise at least for us that wouldn’t be a unilateral decision.
+1. Decisions that affect the family, are family decisions. He is putting a strain on your relationship and foisting household responsibilities onto you, even though you work too. You need to at least say this to him. Personally I found couples counseling helpful.
Anonymous wrote:That would be a big fight in my household. That’s a joint decision.
Is it possible that the status quo (or stepping down for better balance) are not real possibilities for him career wise? Not because of want but because those jobs don’t exist or won’t pay for your life? Because otherwise at least for us that wouldn’t be a unilateral decision.
Anonymous wrote:This is his way of not dealing with the reality of marriage and kids. He wants out but is obligated to stay. Men who like being married want ti be around their kids and wives.
Anonymous wrote:That would be a big fight in my household. That’s a joint decision.
Is it possible that the status quo (or stepping down for better balance) are not real possibilities for him career wise? Not because of want but because those jobs don’t exist or won’t pay for your life? Because otherwise at least for us that wouldn’t be a unilateral decision.