Anonymous wrote:OP here. People think your digs about my grammar/prose are hurting. They aren't. This isn't a peer reviewed journal article. Trust me, I have plenty of those. It's a message board. Slang is LITERALLY okay, y'all. =)
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it. For a few weeks/months, okay. But in perpetuity? FWIW, I'm a guy and I'm talking mostly about my guy friends. Is it that their wives are keeping them away? That they don't want to see what it's like back in the single/non-kidded world? It can't be that they are that "busy." I'm not talking about crashing Vegas and roadtrips, but guys who I used to have a weekly dinner with or grab coffee or a beer for an hour during or after the workday that literally disappear. Not even "Oh sorry I can't make it"... just radio f'in silence. Makes me feel like the childfree types -- of which I'm not one myself -- have a point.
What gives?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. People think your digs about my grammar/prose are hurting. They aren't. This isn't a peer reviewed journal article. Trust me, I have plenty of those. It's a message board. Slang is LITERALLY okay, y'all. =)
This is DCUM, yo. Consider it a peer-reviewed message board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the hardest part to understand is the complete lack of "me" time when you are a parent and what that does. Before I had kids, once my work day was done, it was my choice on how to spend the rest of my time. I could socialize and relax and exercise at times of my choosing and often do all three in a single day. I chose my bedtime, my work wake up and departure time, and could spend time with myself. As a parent, most of that is blown away. You are responsible for keeping other people alive and need to work to their schedule. The children want to be around you. When you finally get a child-free and task-free time, unless you are a massive extrovert, you want to spend a bit of time just being, and not with other people. Only once your me-recharge time has added up a bit do you feel like seeing other people.
This. I would need about a million hours in pure solitude before I would ever be interested in friends who are not my dearest inner circle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense,OP, I'm certain this is not you, but you sound like the thirty year old guy who's still wearing his varsity letter jacket from high school and unwilling to move on and grow up.
Ha! Too funny. I'm a near-tenured professor. I assure you I'm not fratting out. I'm talking about things like wine tastings, coffee, art museums, etc. Not stupid shit kids in their 20s do in DC like softball leagues or kickball.
what is your problem. Kids are a time suck no matter how you do it. Also, on evenings I not with my kid, I would like to hit the gym. Maybe your bros are having sex with their wives, laughing with their kids or working out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No offense,OP, I'm certain this is not you, but you sound like the thirty year old guy who's still wearing his varsity letter jacket from high school and unwilling to move on and grow up.
Ha! Too funny. I'm a near-tenured professor. I assure you I'm not fratting out. I'm talking about things like wine tastings, coffee, art museums, etc. Not stupid shit kids in their 20s do in DC like softball leagues or kickball.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think the hardest part to understand is the complete lack of "me" time when you are a parent and what that does. Before I had kids, once my work day was done, it was my choice on how to spend the rest of my time. I could socialize and relax and exercise at times of my choosing and often do all three in a single day. I chose my bedtime, my work wake up and departure time, and could spend time with myself. As a parent, most of that is blown away. You are responsible for keeping other people alive and need to work to their schedule. The children want to be around you. When you finally get a child-free and task-free time, unless you are a massive extrovert, you want to spend a bit of time just being, and not with other people. Only once your me-recharge time has added up a bit do you feel like seeing other people.
+100. When my kids go to their grandparents house for one week in the summer, we are in awe. No cooking, we go out to Happy Hour because we can. I come home and have NO responsibilities. If I wake up at 6am and feel like going in early to work I can do so because I don't have to drop the kids at camp/daycare. Heck, one day we went crazy and went to a movie one evening during the work week that the kids were away because it was sold out during the weekend and we said wait, we can go to a 6:00pm movie and still get to bed early enough for work the next day.
So agree with the other posters that part of get together with friends depends on the time, frequency, and age of the children. When my children were young, we would tend to have Mom Night Out during the work week but around 7-7:30 so it would be after the kids were in bed or close to it so it wasn't putting a lot of extra work for our husbands. We also were meeting up mabye once a month, not every week. With another group of friends we found Sunday brunch was surprisingly devoid of any conflicts with kid activities for the most part. My phone conversation with college friends tended to be on the drive home while in rush hour traffic - it's the only time I have both the privacy for a phone call and a decent block of time before the kids are asleep. I talk to one friend weekly - in a way being on a shedule in a sense makes it easier. For lots of guys those kickball teams etc is the way they stay social. Having something that is scheduled and affordable (like running, soccer, kickball) allows people to see friends, you aren't spending the kind of money like eating out (which you can easily spend $35-$40 each time) and are enjoying a hobby. Women have book clubs where no one reads the book - but it's a low cost way to get together on a regular basis.
Anonymous wrote:I think the hardest part to understand is the complete lack of "me" time when you are a parent and what that does. Before I had kids, once my work day was done, it was my choice on how to spend the rest of my time. I could socialize and relax and exercise at times of my choosing and often do all three in a single day. I chose my bedtime, my work wake up and departure time, and could spend time with myself. As a parent, most of that is blown away. You are responsible for keeping other people alive and need to work to their schedule. The children want to be around you. When you finally get a child-free and task-free time, unless you are a massive extrovert, you want to spend a bit of time just being, and not with other people. Only once your me-recharge time has added up a bit do you feel like seeing other people.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. People think your digs about my grammar/prose are hurting. They aren't. This isn't a peer reviewed journal article. Trust me, I have plenty of those. It's a message board. Slang is LITERALLY okay, y'all. =)
Anonymous wrote:OP here. People think your digs about my grammar/prose are hurting. They aren't. This isn't a peer reviewed journal article. Trust me, I have plenty of those. It's a message board. Slang is LITERALLY okay, y'all. =)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Their kids are more important than you are. Deal with it
well, that's a poor attitude, isn't it? they could learn how to include me, I was their friend before they had kids, I should still be considered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Ha! Too funny. I'm a near-tenured professor. I assure you I'm not fratting out. I'm talking about things like wine tastings, coffee, art museums, etc. Not stupid shit kids in their 20s do in DC like softball leagues or kickball.
Hi near-tenured professor. We (DH and I) want to do these grown-up things like coffee, wine tasting, art museums etc. But we are sleep deprived and we have to do kid stuff. The consequence of not doing these horribly mundane and exhausting stuff means that we fall behind to the extent that it is difficult to catch up. Plus we have to work, do house stuff, take care of work projects, health problems of our elderly parents and sick kids and basically be parents.
Will you still be around when we become empty nesters? Because that will probably be the time that we emerge from our parental fog.
On the other hand, if you promise not be judgmental and drop by for just a pizza and beer in a chaotic household, we would love to see you.