Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it's fair that you ask him to keep the kids occupied, but not necessarily out of the house. It's hot and we're in the middle of a pandemic.
I agree with this. I think you can fairly expect him to keep the interruptions down and keep them occupied. But it's a heat wave in thr middle of a pandemic. We're not getting out of the house on a daily basis to do fun stuff right now. Daily outings and 9-5 entertainment is too high an expectation to put on the non-workinf parent.
Anonymous wrote:What does your spouse do during the summers where your child is at camp? Working a different job, tutoring, playing Xbox? If spouse is used to having several weeks to fart around, then spouse needs to realize this summer is different and get it together. It's not nagging.
Anonymous wrote:I think it's fair that you ask him to keep the kids occupied, but not necessarily out of the house. It's hot and we're in the middle of a pandemic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a full time job that is very demanding, even more so now that we have to work at home. My spouse has a job that doesn't require day-to-day work over the summer. Usually our kids would be at camp, but not this summer for obvious reasons. It is a daily struggle to get my spouse to engage the kids and get them out of the house every day. I set up playdates. I suggest going to a pool. I suggest day trips. Most of the time he goes along with what i suggest but takes no initiative do anything. I'm sick of my kids coming to me and saying they're bored and asking me to play with them. I wish I could but I HAVE TO WORK! I'm just worn out and mad right now.
Man, that's a lot of daily nagging. Stop nagging your spouse.
I’m amazed at what people call “nagging.” A spouse who needs these kinds of prompts is failing, and you’re blaming the victim for having the bare minimum of expectations.
This is OP--thank you for this response. I can assure the poster who says I'm nagging that it couldn't be farther from the truth. How is it nagging to suggest that my spouse engage the kids in some activity instead of looking their phone for hours at a time--while the kids do the same. I'm not saying they need to be out and about 8 hours a day--just do something active/fun to break up the monotomy.
Anonymous wrote:Just commiseration. "Mom, can you make lunch for me." "Um, your dad is right. there."
Not to excuse the behavior, but perhaps your DH is struggling with not feeling as if he has value since he isn't working? Yes, it's old-fashioned to ascribe that to a man, but many of us find our identities in our work. If you are the default parent normally, this is a paradigm shift for everyone. My DH was sent home for a few weeks and was at a loss that I was working and he wasn't. It really highlighted that even in normal times I am the default parent and he had to step up.
Have the conversation, and have it again. My DH got better. Not great, but better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a full time job that is very demanding, even more so now that we have to work at home. My spouse has a job that doesn't require day-to-day work over the summer. Usually our kids would be at camp, but not this summer for obvious reasons. It is a daily struggle to get my spouse to engage the kids and get them out of the house every day. I set up playdates. I suggest going to a pool. I suggest day trips. Most of the time he goes along with what i suggest but takes no initiative do anything. I'm sick of my kids coming to me and saying they're bored and asking me to play with them. I wish I could but I HAVE TO WORK! I'm just worn out and mad right now.
Man, that's a lot of daily nagging. Stop nagging your spouse.
I’m amazed at what people call “nagging.” A spouse who needs these kinds of prompts is failing, and you’re blaming the victim for having the bare minimum of expectations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a full time job that is very demanding, even more so now that we have to work at home. My spouse has a job that doesn't require day-to-day work over the summer. Usually our kids would be at camp, but not this summer for obvious reasons. It is a daily struggle to get my spouse to engage the kids and get them out of the house every day. I set up playdates. I suggest going to a pool. I suggest day trips. Most of the time he goes along with what i suggest but takes no initiative do anything. I'm sick of my kids coming to me and saying they're bored and asking me to play with them. I wish I could but I HAVE TO WORK! I'm just worn out and mad right now.
Man, that's a lot of daily nagging. Stop nagging your spouse.
Anonymous wrote:I have a full time job that is very demanding, even more so now that we have to work at home. My spouse has a job that doesn't require day-to-day work over the summer. Usually our kids would be at camp, but not this summer for obvious reasons. It is a daily struggle to get my spouse to engage the kids and get them out of the house every day. I set up playdates. I suggest going to a pool. I suggest day trips. Most of the time he goes along with what i suggest but takes no initiative do anything. I'm sick of my kids coming to me and saying they're bored and asking me to play with them. I wish I could but I HAVE TO WORK! I'm just worn out and mad right now.