Anonymous wrote:Ha! We just got a cat who was having issues. Guess who worked with cat therapist to figure out issues and guess who is now the cats mom?
I call her my 4th child.
I find being direct works best, like: “I need to do X for one hour. Can you feed them lunch and then….?”
Anonymous wrote:OP, sometimes people are single parents even when married
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do you have more than one child? I mean besides your spouse?
Yes, we have two (plus DH, haha). A big part of the problem is that they will both come to me and get annoyed while I'm helping the other one. Like I'll be helping Kid 1 with something and Kid 2 will start just harassing me about needing something else, and in the meantime my DH is off in the background, seemingly oblivious to this. And he doesn't seem to get that being harassed by Kid 2 while I'm trying to finish something with Kid 1 is stressful! It makes me feel a bit crazed.
He wants me to always come to him directly when this happens and make a custom request ("I am helping Larlo with this stuck zipper but Larla can't reach the peanut butter, can you help her with that?") and I feel like he should just be a little more in tune to things that are happening right around him and consider just saying "Hey Larla, Mom's in the middle of something -- can I help you?"
Instead what will happen is I'll ask him to do it, he'll act aggrieved at the interruption, and then two minutes later when I've finally dealt with Kid 1's zipper, DH will pop his head and say "Do you know where the peanut butter is, I can't find it."
Aaaaaaaaargh. I cannot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If it’s something like a meal, decide ahead of time who’s in charge of lunch.
Also, when you need uninterrupted time, you need to leave the house. I know that kind of sucks. But if you’re not good at ignoring the way your husband is, leaving is the best strategy. Even if you’re just sitting on a park bench reading or whatever. Go to the library or a coffee shop to work. Etc.
OP here. And yes, leaving the house is key. I'm struggling a bit finding place to go sometimes though. It was easier pre-Covid but now its harder and more awkward to spend hours at a coffee shop. I can, it's just less pleasant than it was a couple years ago. I also put a lot of effort into making the house nice and functional during Covid and part of me gets frustrated when I have to leave to do things like pay bills or work on a project or read. I spent time setting up our home office and creating comfortable spots to do these things during Covid when we couldn't go anywhere, and it sucks to have to leave to go sit in an uncomfortable chair in a too-cold coffee shop to pay bills when I have a nice desk with a pleasant window and my slippers and my favorite tea at home.
I know that now I'm must whining/venting. But it does feel good to be validated here and know I'm not the only one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t know why y’all marry these men.
When I married him, he was a self-sufficient adult who owned a home, was great at his job, planned dates for us, did his own laundry, etc. I never expected to be in this situation, and even when we had one kid he was pretty good. But something about the second kid... he just checks out a lot now. I have no idea what red flags I supposedly missed. I don't know what I could have done to prevent this beyond aggressively forcing him to take on childcare duties when they were babies. Should I have forced him to take a solo paternity leave, would that have helped? But then how do you even do that, it was not an option for us.
I think he hit a limit on parenting and we didn't know what that limit was going to be until we exceeded it. He was doing fine up until then.
Anonymous wrote:If it’s something like a meal, decide ahead of time who’s in charge of lunch.
Also, when you need uninterrupted time, you need to leave the house. I know that kind of sucks. But if you’re not good at ignoring the way your husband is, leaving is the best strategy. Even if you’re just sitting on a park bench reading or whatever. Go to the library or a coffee shop to work. Etc.