Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:for 100,000 years of human history, until 100 years ago, all parents were ambivalent about loving their children - other than a base evolutionary sense to protect their lives. This business that a dad (or mom) should find joy in giving a 3 year old a bath every day is beyond me.
+1
Anonymous wrote:for 100,000 years of human history, until 100 years ago, all parents were ambivalent about loving their children - other than a base evolutionary sense to protect their lives. This business that a dad (or mom) should find joy in giving a 3 year old a bath every day is beyond me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Another father here. Anyone in their right mind regrets having kids. It is a relentless nightmare.
I agree that there is not point complaining about it though. You can't push the shit back into the horse, as they say.
Next time he complains just point out that it is only a few more decades before the sweet release of death. Until then he just has to suck it up like the rest of us.
You win the internet today!
Anonymous wrote:for 100,000 years of human history, until 100 years ago, all parents were ambivalent about loving their children - other than a base evolutionary sense to protect their lives. This business that a dad (or mom) should find joy in giving a 3 year old a bath every day is beyond me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ahem, reminding ppl this thread is from 2011!
And yet it still resonates with ppl
Anonymous wrote:"if he's giving them a bath, he's on his iPhone while they're bathing instead of playing with them"
If I co-parented with someone who criticized things such as this, I probably wouldn't regret having kids, but I might regret choosing to parent with this person.
Anonymous wrote:ahem, reminding ppl this thread is from 2011!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"if he's giving them a bath, he's on his iPhone while they're bathing instead of playing with them"
If I co-parented with someone who criticized things such as this, I probably wouldn't regret having kids, but I might regret choosing to parent with this person.
OP again - I'm not saying that you to be a perfect parent all the time. But I gave that example because I wonder if my kids notice that daddy is always doing something else instead of playing with them or interacting with them. Sometimes my daughter asks him questions 4-5 times and he ignores her bc he's on his phone and finally I just answer. It's pretty obvious that if he had the choice, he would never be with them. I was telling a story about someone who had multiple nannies covering essentially 24 hours a day and he said "I wish I had that much money so I could pay someone else to play with them." And it's obvious he feels this way by his actions.
Anonymous wrote:Another father here. Anyone in their right mind regrets having kids. It is a relentless nightmare.
I agree that there is not point complaining about it though. You can't push the shit back into the horse, as they say.
Next time he complains just point out that it is only a few more decades before the sweet release of death. Until then he just has to suck it up like the rest of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: Reading some of these responses— like the one above saying the husband is “missing his dad goggles”— makes me feel very sorry for dads who went into it with some ambivalence and are now coming under criticism and shaming from women who believe you can’t be a good dad if you aren’t 100% in love with the experience.
Think it from the child’s POV. Think of it from YOUR child’s POV. Wouldn’t it break your heart to know that your child’s father isn’t 100% in love and all in all the way on the experience?
Eventually the ambivalence becomes known to the child and it breaks something inside of them.
Lots of shattered adults out there because they had crappy, neglectful parents who didn’t shower them with love and acceptance.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone admit any of this ambivalence toward parenting to their friends?