Anonymous wrote:With all due respect PP, isn't the fact that they DON'T work together as a couple the problem? No tricks from business school can fix that.
Anonymous wrote:I think you need to work as a couple to figure out how you can best prioritize your needs as individuals and as a family.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find it odd that just because something works for them, people seem to think it should be mandated for everyone else. If 2-3 hours of "me" time a week works for you, good for you! But there's no rule that says everyone has to follow this.
yes, but i think it's clear that the current situation (with each partner clinging to hours of alone time) clearly ISN'T working for the OP. Hence the suggestion (by many people) that a more traditional arrangement of more family time might be an idea.
Anonymous wrote:OP here -- DS is napping and DH is biking. I have a friend coming over (with kid) to go out for a walk this morning. Thanks for all the advice to everyone. I have lots to consider and think about. I had my DH read through the posts (when it was at about 4 pages long) and we had a good conversation about issues. I think the solo TV at night really does make me sad, and someone asked if I could imagine spending 90% of our time together as a family. Honestly, I can't, and that makes me sad, too. We married, had a child, and moved to the 'burbs in our late 30s, and so our adjustment to a non-urban, non-traveling, more "settled" life is hard for both of us, I think. The biking is important to DH, and I can't ask him to stop. It keeps him healthy and sane, and I want to encourage it. But, I do want him to be more engaged with us as a family when he is home and to spend more time intentionally doing fun activities as a family, rather than just running errands or hanging out with other friends. Thanks again.
Anonymous wrote:THIS. THIS. THIS.
Anonymous wrote:Sorry, I do think that somone who spends the bulk of his off work time out of the house doing intensive biking with friends or partying with colleagues is not committed to his wife and child. When the same guy watches tv in another part of the house unless mandated to hang with wife and kid on one of his few nights home, that is not someone invested in spending time with them. When that same guy fills in some of the few remaining hours together as a family by having friends over, then I do think that there are intimacy issues. He is avoiding intimacy with his wife and child by filling his time with other activities and people.
When OP says that she can't imagine the 3 of them spending most of their off time together as a family, and that that realization makes her feel sad, I'll wildly speculate that there isn't a huge amount of intimacy in their marrriage. She confirmed that he watches a lot of tv when they are alone together and that she feels lonely. She is trying to force him to engage as a family man with the schedule, the issue isn't that she needs whole days by herself. There was no mention of couple time, instead that he watches tv when they are alone together or invites friends over, or goes out biking or with colleagues. This is not a man comfortable with a close connection with his wife. I think for a lot of people busy schedules, travel, etc, hides this stuff and when the family unit doesn't really come together it gets hard to ignore. OP doesn't just need scheduling ideas, OP needs a DH who wants to have her and their baby as the center of his life, as reflected in how he spends his time.