Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mom got overwhelmed and depressed and dropped the rope. It was terrible. I do not have a relationship with her as an adult.
Please hire help and get yourself together.
What? Really?
How long did she drop the rope for?
Some of these responses that you feel unloved as an adult or can’t have a relationship with your mom because you missed ballet practice when you were 5 are kind of nuts.
There was obviously a lot more going on in your household than one parent having one episode of depression.
I broke my leg a couple of months ago and didn’t do anything this spring. I couldn’t cook, couldn’t do laundry, couldn’t drive. My kids had to step it up A LOT, they ate a lot of takeout, and they didn’t get to do a lot of things that they would normally do. I don’t think this means that they can’t have a relationship with me as adults.
Anonymous wrote:You can drop the rope to a point. I did that recently - first one day per week now two. The first couple weeks were rough I will not lie. There were a couple games, etc. where the kids didn’t have what they needed or weren’t fed. Now he has it down. I think it also has helped his relationship with the kids a lot in so many ways. I had to just let it go and not swoop in to fix things or do it my way. We have a set schedule now where he is in charge of everything on two set weekdays every week. You got it OP.
Anonymous wrote:My mom got overwhelmed and depressed and dropped the rope. It was terrible. I do not have a relationship with her as an adult.
Please hire help and get yourself together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can drop the rope to a point. I did that recently - first one day per week now two. The first couple weeks were rough I will not lie. There were a couple games, etc. where the kids didn’t have what they needed or weren’t fed. Now he has it down. I think it also has helped his relationship with the kids a lot in so many ways. I had to just let it go and not swoop in to fix things or do it my way. We have a set schedule now where he is in charge of everything on two set weekdays every week. You got it OP.
It is never acceptable to not feed your children to prove a point.
Agree but you can drop the rope to an extreme degree and still feed them. Do one night take out, one night rice and beans, one night pasta with sauce, one night grilled cheese with carrot sticks. Serve fruit with each.
OP, we hired someone who was retired that worked 2-7 and would unload dishwasher, put in laundry, get kids from school. Take them to after school activities and wipe down kitchen counters. We paid her a lot but it was worth it. You definitely need something like that. We lost her during the pandemic when she decided to just retire. Our replacement has been to rely heavily on car pooling. If your kids are that young they should only be activities with other kids from school so you can arrange car pools. So you’re only driving 1-2 nights a week. And husband can get home to do it once a week and work from the car while kids are at practice. My husband is a big law partner and is sort of famous on our kids sports teams for working during practices, during half time, etc.
You probably can’t just walk away (although I used to fantasize about that sometimes and was writing a home girl type novel in my head, but more gone mom) …. But you can probably scale down a lot of what you are doing and no one will really care.
And you can make the kids do more — clean their plates, unload disahwasher, wipe kitchen counters, swiffer or vacuum. You’ll need to nah a little or pay them but they can do that stuff.
I did let my kids keep their rooms pretty messy—that has been part of dropping the rope.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - kids are 10 years old and younger. They just don’t care. I have told them to do chores and they do it for a week then quit. They don’t care if they have clean clothes or clean dishes. They don’t care if the house is a mess. I care so I clean and make food.
I don’t actually like much food - I would prefer to never cook another meal for the rest of my life.
You need to make them care. Any time they don't put their dirty laundry where it goes, you put it in a bag and they lose it. Eventually they'll have no clothes left. Then they'll care. Get a stool so they can reach the washer and dryer (for kids 6/7 and older) and teach them to move things from washer to dryer, dryer to laundry basket to be folded. Teach the ones 3 and up to match socks and ball them, fold washcloths and hand towels and pillowcases and pants. You do shirts, sheets, big towels.
Stop letting them do what they want when the house is a mess. They can't leave the kitchen after a meal until they bring their dirty dishes and silverware to the counter next to the sink. The 10 yr old should be emptying the dishwasher. Next oldest can wipe the dinner table after each meal. If you want them to do something, they must do it right now, and can't play first. You are angry at yourself, not them. You are not teaching them discipline and doing what you have to before doing what you want to. Start teaching the 10 yr old to cook. They can make scrambled eggs, omelets, Mac & cheese, salads, sandwiches, cut up fruit
and veg for snacks, etc.
Op - I would just like to stop making food all together and let them figure it out. Same with clothes. If they want to wear dirty clothes it’s their choice. They have to wear uniforms so I can’t take all their clothes away.
At this point I can't tell if OP is clinically depressed, a help-rejecting complainer, or just a garden variety troll.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can drop the rope to a point. I did that recently - first one day per week now two. The first couple weeks were rough I will not lie. There were a couple games, etc. where the kids didn’t have what they needed or weren’t fed. Now he has it down. I think it also has helped his relationship with the kids a lot in so many ways. I had to just let it go and not swoop in to fix things or do it my way. We have a set schedule now where he is in charge of everything on two set weekdays every week. You got it OP.
It is never acceptable to not feed your children to prove a point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My takeaway from this thread so far based on some of the responses is that I need to wash our sheets more often than I do.
I've always washed sheets and towels once a week. Is that not normal?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op - I work full time. I feel like a glorified maid, driver and chef for my kids. I just want them to figure it out themselves.
You want under-10 year olds to drive themselves to practice? Sounds like you have a crappy chore balance with your husband, but try to operate in the land of reality here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My takeaway from this thread so far based on some of the responses is that I need to wash our sheets more often than I do.
I've always washed sheets and towels once a week. Is that not normal?
Anonymous wrote:You can drop the rope to a point. I did that recently - first one day per week now two. The first couple weeks were rough I will not lie. There were a couple games, etc. where the kids didn’t have what they needed or weren’t fed. Now he has it down. I think it also has helped his relationship with the kids a lot in so many ways. I had to just let it go and not swoop in to fix things or do it my way. We have a set schedule now where he is in charge of everything on two set weekdays every week. You got it OP.
Anonymous wrote:Op - kids are 10 years old and younger. They just don’t care. I have told them to do chores and they do it for a week then quit. They don’t care if they have clean clothes or clean dishes. They don’t care if the house is a mess. I care so I clean and make food.
I don’t actually like much food - I would prefer to never cook another meal for the rest of my life.
Anonymous wrote:Is this an American thing to wash sheets every week? I am almost positive the rest of the world does not do this. I wash mine maybe once a quarter or maybe once a half year. They don't seem filthy to me? I don't smell. I don't get it. I don't sleep naked so maybe that helps.