Anonymous wrote:Why aren’t you doing stuff on the weekends all together, as a family?
Anonymous wrote:Cooking isn’t a childcare duty. It’s not realistic that just because he is a primary caregiver, he should automatically be the cook while still working 45 hours a week.
Anonymous wrote:My husband really wanted kids. He assured me would be the primarily caregiver.
I am very focused on my career and wrk long hours.
He assured me that he would be happy to be the primary caregiver
Now this has called a lot of resentment.
He does do drop off and pick up in 75% of cases.
But he does none of the cooking, admin, finding daycare, applying for passport, etc.
He thinks I should do that because I do less of the direct care.
If I need to work on the weekend, I have to hire a babysitter so that he can play video games. He can’t handle more than 3 hours taking care of a toddler.
I work 60 hours a week and he works 45 hours a week.
I have no free time.
He has plenty.
Love the baby and I like my career.
Our marriage is strained because we fight about childcare and tasks all the time.
I thought that it’s possible for a guy to be the main caretaker.
Was naive.
Marriages work much better when they follow traditional gender roles, except for a few circumstances. But that’s the exception not the rule.
Unfortunately I make more than he does so I cannot step back.
I am exhausted and resentful of him.
Anonymous wrote:OP
Look I may get flamed but I’ll be very honest here. When I was on maternity leave or when I take care of the baby by myself multiple days in a row (when my husband is away and my nanny was also on vacation) it was really not THaT difficult. It was pleasant and sure there were times when it was a bit less pleasant but overall it was really fine. I don’t get the exhaustion that some people claim comes with taking care of a baby. And he’s a medium baby if I may say. Not super needy but also not content no matter what. My job is much more exhausting to me. And stressful. ThAts my honest opinion. So no, 2.5 hours of childcare per day does not seem like it’s that terrible. I would trade off other tasks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP
I leave for work at 630. Before I leave I prepare the baby’s breakfast, what else he needs for the day. My husband wakes up at 7 but reads his news for 45 minutes because he says he needs to start his day right. So he wakes up the baby changes the diaper and dresses him but his meal; etc all done by me.
There’s a certain tone when you speak about your husband that indicates that you don’t think he is managing his free time the way you should.
The thing is, healthy people do this. They budget extra time in the morning to start their day right. They relax by watching tv before bed after the baby is put down for the night - even if that means there’s some dishes in the sink. They share childfree time with their spouses on the weekend, especially when that spouse indicates that she wants more hands on time with the baby, so they can maintain their hobbies.
His views on free time may differ from yours but that doesn’t make him wrong.
DP. She’s stressed out and frazzled. This too shall pass.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op
I started ordering more pre made food for the baby like tiny organics and little spoon. I feel like it’s not the healthiest and my husband thinks it’s expensive. But I guess it is what it is. Better than me cooking at 10pm.
Who did the cooking pre baby?
Neither of us. We get take out or eat sandwiches. But with baby we feel like he should eat healthier
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP
I leave for work at 630. Before I leave I prepare the baby’s breakfast, what else he needs for the day. My husband wakes up at 7 but reads his news for 45 minutes because he says he needs to start his day right. So he wakes up the baby changes the diaper and dresses him but his meal; etc all done by me.
There’s a certain tone when you speak about your husband that indicates that you don’t think he is managing his free time the way you should.
The thing is, healthy people do this. They budget extra time in the morning to start their day right. They relax by watching tv before bed after the baby is put down for the night - even if that means there’s some dishes in the sink. They share childfree time with their spouses on the weekend, especially when that spouse indicates that she wants more hands on time with the baby, so they can maintain their hobbies.
His views on free time may differ from yours but that doesn’t make him wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op
I started ordering more pre made food for the baby like tiny organics and little spoon. I feel like it’s not the healthiest and my husband thinks it’s expensive. But I guess it is what it is. Better than me cooking at 10pm.
Who did the cooking pre baby?
Anonymous wrote:Op
I started ordering more pre made food for the baby like tiny organics and little spoon. I feel like it’s not the healthiest and my husband thinks it’s expensive. But I guess it is what it is. Better than me cooking at 10pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s a sad state of affairs that we expect a couple to work 105 combined hours per week and have time to raise a kid. Work is the bigger problem here.
OP exactly my point. The myth of the career woman is oversold. You can definitely either make it super big or have a good but not amazing career and have a good marriage.but a really good career usually works out if it’s the man.
Not true for everyone, speak for yourself.
OP, as someone who had the career I wanted and has kids, I would encourage you to watch that Grey’s Anatomy episode where Bailey tells Mer to get a deeper bench. No matter what your child care situation is you need to build in layers of redundancy and be flexible. Treat this like a marathon, not a sprint. Otherwise you will burn out yourself and everyone around you.
Get more childcare. Figure out the division of tasks, adjusting as you go along. Understand that in five or ten years he will be broken in as a dad and adjust your expectations accordingly. I don’t know a single woman with a career who wasn’t disappointed at first with a husband’s lack of ability to do more, no matter how much he did. I don’t know a single woman who wasn’t happy to have kept her career once the kids got older. It only gets easier. You are really in the swamp when kids are too young to go to school, but this will pass in a couple short years. Once you’re more senior you can flex your hours. Keep the bigger picture in mind.
OP: Thank you. Will do. And that’s helpful to hear.
I do flex my hours. Our daycare was closed last week due to COVID and I took on the bulk of childcare because I can flex my hours. My husband says he cannot work after 7pm because he’s too tired. I worked 8-midnight to make up for the lost time during the day. This is what’s driving me crazy.
PP here. Just pace yourself. You can’t expect yourself to sprint like old times the first 2-3 years after having a baby.
This is temporary. Keep saying that to yourself. Once school kicks in, and their sleep stabilizes, there are new challenges but by and large it’s much less hands on. For one thing you don’t have this problem of always having to get a babysitter.
Think of your husband as an energy reserve. Yes he could deplete himself as you are doing, but would that help the family? You may crash and he may have to take over. Charge everyone’s battery as much as possible and get other batteries on board. I spent a week or two hiring each nanny and it was worth it. Also got help with cooking. Look into meal delivery services, outsource whatever you can. It gets much easier but you can’t be firing on all cylinders the whole time.
Anonymous wrote:I would love to see what happened if a man wrote this about his wife.
You're awful, OP, you need to hire out help. He's working a full time job and you expect him to do everything a SAHM does. I work part-time and I don't even do half the stuff on your stupid list. Grow the F_ up.
Anonymous wrote:OP
I leave for work at 630. Before I leave I prepare the baby’s breakfast, what else he needs for the day. My husband wakes up at 7 but reads his news for 45 minutes because he says he needs to start his day right. So he wakes up the baby changes the diaper and dresses him but his meal; etc all done by me.