Anonymous wrote:This is never an issue with one dedicated stay at home parent, two careers are just harder to juggle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. DH is overall not a jerk and he was remorseful in this situation, but I don’t want remorse; obviously I want a spouse I can 100% depend on. When this happens, he usually stays on top of things for the next couple weeks then falls off again.
He usually handles pickup and I do dropoff since his job starts and ends early. He argues that since he’s 90% dependable, I should give him a break the other 10% of the time. We have tried therapy (three times over the years!) but I still find myself resentful and frustrated and unable to completely trust him. And now I’m just kind of sad.
I feel like if you're working on a purely statistical model, he had a sound argument, but this is high stakes - assume your kid is at childcare 300 days a year - at that rate you're going to be running out of the house with your hair on fire 30 days a year. That's insane.
; obviously I want a spouse I can 100% depend on.
Anonymous wrote:Being livid isn't going to solve your issue.
If he has a job where meeting can happen at any moment and he'd not at liberty to leave he should not be responsible for pickup up.
Options are you hire an on call sitter and it's his responsibility to text/ call that person if he's pulled into a meeting.
Or you hire a sitter to always do pickup. For me it would be option B and he doesn't get to day no.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP again. DH is overall not a jerk and he was remorseful in this situation, but I don’t want remorse; obviously I want a spouse I can 100% depend on. When this happens, he usually stays on top of things for the next couple weeks then falls off again.
He usually handles pickup and I do dropoff since his job starts and ends early. He argues that since he’s 90% dependable, I should give him a break the other 10% of the time. We have tried therapy (three times over the years!) but I still find myself resentful and frustrated and unable to completely trust him. And now I’m just kind of sad.
I feel like if you're working on a purely statistical model, he had a sound argument, but this is high stakes - assume your kid is at childcare 300 days a year - at that rate you're going to be running out of the house with your hair on fire 30 days a year. That's insane.
Anonymous wrote:OP again. DH is overall not a jerk and he was remorseful in this situation, but I don’t want remorse; obviously I want a spouse I can 100% depend on. When this happens, he usually stays on top of things for the next couple weeks then falls off again.
He usually handles pickup and I do dropoff since his job starts and ends early. He argues that since he’s 90% dependable, I should give him a break the other 10% of the time. We have tried therapy (three times over the years!) but I still find myself resentful and frustrated and unable to completely trust him. And now I’m just kind of sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10+
But he will never change because you ultimately came to the rescue. He should’ve face the consequences and embarrassment of picking up late.
Aftercare was calling mom because it was closing. Not really an option in this scenario.
Again, natural consequences— especially the ones that simultaneously shaft the kid - only work with mature, coachable neurotypical kids or people.
OP’s spouse had an attention and/or hyperactivity disorder he needs to manage better, as well as priority and planning issues, as well as communication issues. He also must be either s total tool at work that he can manage to leave before 5pm once or just so very very important and in a very very important role at a a very very important meeting that he couldn’t pick up his own kid or find a solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not trust him to take the kids anywhere in the summer. You hear about young children dying in cars due to absent minded fathers leaving them in hot cars.
OP here, thankfully child is old enough to get out of a car. But the first few years, I was a nervous wreck every time thry were in the car on a hot day without me.
And it’s funny that you correctly assumed spouse is a “he.” Of course he’s a he.
Why do you say "of course?"
DCUM rule - all men are stupid, lazy, and irresponsible.
Hit a nerve?
Not all men, PP. But if you tell me a story like OP did, with a parent “forgetting” to pick up their own child from child care, despite clearly needing multiple reminders, the safe bet is that the dysfunctional parent is a male.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10+
But he will never change because you ultimately came to the rescue. He should’ve face the consequences and embarrassment of picking up late.
Aftercare was calling mom because it was closing. Not really an option in this scenario.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:10+
But he will never change because you ultimately came to the rescue. He should’ve face the consequences and embarrassment of picking up late.
Aftercare was calling mom because it was closing. Not really an option in this scenario.
Anonymous wrote:10+
But he will never change because you ultimately came to the rescue. He should’ve face the consequences and embarrassment of picking up late.