Anonymous wrote:He wants his alone time starting at 6 pm, or after your child goes to bed at 7:30?
No, the man actually jumps in and does bed/bath. He's on the second he walks in the door. Honestly, OP. Do you want to be a single parent? Keep bean counting.
He wants his alone time starting at 6 pm, or after your child goes to bed at 7:30?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - does your husband want his alone time on weeknights or on weekends?
OP here. He said both. Right now he arrives home at 6 pm on average on weekdays. Twice a week he comes home later (after bedtime). Our child's bedtime is 7:30 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - does your husband want his alone time on weeknights or on weekends?
OP here. He said both. Right now he arrives home at 6 pm on average on weekdays. Twice a week he comes home later (after bedtime). Our child's bedtime is 7:30 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Also, to clarify, the housework all gets done, but I often don't do it during the day because I use my son's one 2 hour nap per day to either nap myself if I'm tired from the morning's activity, or do my own projects. After my husband gets home from work (6 pm), he takes over childcare until bedtime (7:30 pm) and that's when I get most of the housework done, and after bedtime as well. I love to clean and do housework so I consider this part of my alone time.
The kitchen/dishes I clean while my toddler is finishing lunch. But I don't really get a chance to get laundry done or tidy/straighten until I have a period of time to myself. I don't really see how anyone can get a lot of housework done while taking care of a young toddler at the same time. We are out all morning at various activities, come home and I feed him lunch, then naptime, and then I have the afternoon and that entire time is devoted to entertaining my son. Also, after the morning's activity (gym class or playgroup or whatever) I don't feel like going out again in the afternoon to do errands. This is mainly because of the wear and tear on my back from the repetitive lifting and carrying (my 14 month old weighs over 30 pounds and it is very hard on my back when we are out).
What activities are you doing with your child that take all morning? Mommy and me classes are typically no more than 45 minutes at that age. Also, you don't have to entertain your toddler every minute he's awake. It's good for him to learn to entertain himself a bit. Set up a toddler-proofed place in the house where he can play with some toys and it's easy for you to keep an eye on him, and get your chores done.
OP here. The classes/activities we do are 1.5 hours usually, plus 30 minutes to get there each way (we live in the suburbs). With feeding breakfast before the class and the commute, then yes, all that does take all morning.
Why do you choose to allow those classes and activities to take up that much of your time?
OP here. I really enjoy the classes and I love socializing with other moms. We do a variety of morning activities--one day is playgroup, one day is gym class, and three days usually are the church Mommy and Me classes. Playgroup usually runs for 2 hours. We live in the suburbs so there is a significant drive to most of these things--at least 30 mintues each way. Like I mentioned before, with breakfast and the drive, then yes our mornings are pretty full.
This sounds nice, but you have to admit that a lot of your lack of time is a direct result of some of these relatively discretionary activities that you are doing. I don't think that there is anything wrong with doing them, but I can also see why your husband might be feeling a bit stressed and unable to understand why you can't give him a little time to himself.
OP here. I don't understand your comment. How do my activities that I take my toddler to impacting my husband's lack of alone time? I am in charge of childcare from 6 am - 6 pm most days, other days longer during late work nights or husband's travel. I need to entertain my toddler for the whole day, other than naptime and mealtimes (well I have to entertain him at mealtimes too otherwise he gets cranky). So I don't see how these activities impact husband's time to himself? If I was staying at home more and going to fewer activities that wouldn't change anything. I need these activities so I can socialize with other moms, and my toddler loves to run around and have fun at these activities. My toddler takes a two hour nap per day regardless if we stay home all day or go out.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I also find it sad that you and your husband are treating your toddler like a hot potato. There are simple things that you can do as a family. For example, on Saturday morning have a pancake breakfast together. I can tell you that my toddler is happiest when she, DH, and I are all together and DH and I also enjoy this time. I think you guys may want to seriously consider not having more children. I am not saying this to be mean or harsh but I'm not sure how your marriage can survive this for too long. It sounds like you are coworkers managing a task.
I thought I would enjoy being a SAHM (which I do) and that it would suit me better than my career
Anonymous wrote:OP - does your husband want his alone time on weeknights or on weekends?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Also, to clarify, the housework all gets done, but I often don't do it during the day because I use my son's one 2 hour nap per day to either nap myself if I'm tired from the morning's activity, or do my own projects. After my husband gets home from work (6 pm), he takes over childcare until bedtime (7:30 pm) and that's when I get most of the housework done, and after bedtime as well. I love to clean and do housework so I consider this part of my alone time.
The kitchen/dishes I clean while my toddler is finishing lunch. But I don't really get a chance to get laundry done or tidy/straighten until I have a period of time to myself. I don't really see how anyone can get a lot of housework done while taking care of a young toddler at the same time. We are out all morning at various activities, come home and I feed him lunch, then naptime, and then I have the afternoon and that entire time is devoted to entertaining my son. Also, after the morning's activity (gym class or playgroup or whatever) I don't feel like going out again in the afternoon to do errands. This is mainly because of the wear and tear on my back from the repetitive lifting and carrying (my 14 month old weighs over 30 pounds and it is very hard on my back when we are out).
What activities are you doing with your child that take all morning? Mommy and me classes are typically no more than 45 minutes at that age. Also, you don't have to entertain your toddler every minute he's awake. It's good for him to learn to entertain himself a bit. Set up a toddler-proofed place in the house where he can play with some toys and it's easy for you to keep an eye on him, and get your chores done.
OP here. The classes/activities we do are 1.5 hours usually, plus 30 minutes to get there each way (we live in the suburbs). With feeding breakfast before the class and the commute, then yes, all that does take all morning.
Why do you choose to allow those classes and activities to take up that much of your time?
OP here. I really enjoy the classes and I love socializing with other moms. We do a variety of morning activities--one day is playgroup, one day is gym class, and three days usually are the church Mommy and Me classes. Playgroup usually runs for 2 hours. We live in the suburbs so there is a significant drive to most of these things--at least 30 mintues each way. Like I mentioned before, with breakfast and the drive, then yes our mornings are pretty full.
This sounds nice, but you have to admit that a lot of your lack of time is a direct result of some of these relatively discretionary activities that you are doing. I don't think that there is anything wrong with doing them, but I can also see why your husband might be feeling a bit stressed and unable to understand why you can't give him a little time to himself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Also, to clarify, the housework all gets done, but I often don't do it during the day because I use my son's one 2 hour nap per day to either nap myself if I'm tired from the morning's activity, or do my own projects. After my husband gets home from work (6 pm), he takes over childcare until bedtime (7:30 pm) and that's when I get most of the housework done, and after bedtime as well. I love to clean and do housework so I consider this part of my alone time.
The kitchen/dishes I clean while my toddler is finishing lunch. But I don't really get a chance to get laundry done or tidy/straighten until I have a period of time to myself. I don't really see how anyone can get a lot of housework done while taking care of a young toddler at the same time. We are out all morning at various activities, come home and I feed him lunch, then naptime, and then I have the afternoon and that entire time is devoted to entertaining my son. Also, after the morning's activity (gym class or playgroup or whatever) I don't feel like going out again in the afternoon to do errands. This is mainly because of the wear and tear on my back from the repetitive lifting and carrying (my 14 month old weighs over 30 pounds and it is very hard on my back when we are out).
What activities are you doing with your child that take all morning? Mommy and me classes are typically no more than 45 minutes at that age. Also, you don't have to entertain your toddler every minute he's awake. It's good for him to learn to entertain himself a bit. Set up a toddler-proofed place in the house where he can play with some toys and it's easy for you to keep an eye on him, and get your chores done.
OP here. The classes/activities we do are 1.5 hours usually, plus 30 minutes to get there each way (we live in the suburbs). With feeding breakfast before the class and the commute, then yes, all that does take all morning.
Why do you choose to allow those classes and activities to take up that much of your time?
OP here. I really enjoy the classes and I love socializing with other moms. We do a variety of morning activities--one day is playgroup, one day is gym class, and three days usually are the church Mommy and Me classes. Playgroup usually runs for 2 hours. We live in the suburbs so there is a significant drive to most of these things--at least 30 mintues each way. Like I mentioned before, with breakfast and the drive, then yes our mornings are pretty full.
Anonymous wrote:I'd find activities much closer to home. I live in the suburbs too and when my kids were under 3, we did activities within a 10 minute drive, max. When you say suburbs, are you really in an exurb or rural area? Church is a 30 minute drive?
Why did you decide to SAH in the first place, OP?
Anonymous wrote:Biglaw turned SAHM here. But the point is that this is a choice. I remember getting breaks. I also remember getting told I needed to drop what I was doing, cancel plans, and put everything toward a client issue.
I actually enjoy being a SAHM. I just think it's not a good fit for someone who can't multi-task, and who struggles with the day to day drudgery. Yes, it's fun. Yes, even I take naps sometimes. But I still deal with the regular stuff, cleaning, laundry, meal prep, and keeping my kids alive. Because I can juggle. Those who can't aren't served by being home.
OP, you get you time. Your kid naps. Your DH takes the kid on the weekends for outings without you. You volunteer and have a sitter come. I just don't get what you want short of basically having your kid in someone else's care, which means you may need to find a job.