Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also want to point that he's incredibly intelligent and talented has excelled at everything he's ever tried. That's why I fell in love with him and why I'm so puzzled at what's going on. If he put in a fraction of effort into parenting as he does into everything else, he would be father of the year. He's genuinely one of those people who is just good at everything.Anonymous wrote:He likes to put things together so I asked him to get a baby gate. We ordered online and the gate seemed to be brand new, but after he counted the screws it was clear that some of them were missing making it impossible to assemble. He became really upset and I told him it's totally fine. There are only two options. We contact customer service for a replacement or we go to the hardware store and see if they have the parts we need. He was so frustrated that he didn't want to listen. I'm saddened that he's so overwhelmed by parenting he can't problem solve any situation and I carry the whole mental load.Anonymous wrote:Some specific examples would help.
Your example doesn't show that he's not putting effort into being a parent. It shows someone who is probably trying to be absolutely perfect and sweating the small stuff.
+1. This reads as him being scared to me. Like, if I can't put this baby gate together then what good am I and then imagining all the other terrible things that will happen type scared.
If he is not hands on with the baby, I'd focus on that - baths, diapers, putting baby to bed if possible. If you are nursing and the baby is in a different room at night, have him be the one to bring the baby to you and put baby back down to sleep.
I think this is one area where women get the benefit of the doubt that they are the experts (even if it's your first baby too!) and dads can be hesitant to jump in because they are so afraid of doing something "wrong."
Anonymous wrote:He likes to put things together so I asked him to get a baby gate. We ordered online and the gate seemed to be brand new, but after he counted the screws it was clear that some of them were missing making it impossible to assemble. He became really upset and I told him it's totally fine. There are only two options. We contact customer service for a replacement or we go to the hardware store and see if they have the parts we need. He was so frustrated that he didn't want to listen. I'm saddened that he's so overwhelmed by parenting he can't problem solve any situation and I carry the whole mental load.Anonymous wrote:Some specific examples would help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I also want to point that he's incredibly intelligent and talented has excelled at everything he's ever tried. That's why I fell in love with him and why I'm so puzzled at what's going on. If he put in a fraction of effort into parenting as he does into everything else, he would be father of the year. He's genuinely one of those people who is just good at everything.Anonymous wrote:He likes to put things together so I asked him to get a baby gate. We ordered online and the gate seemed to be brand new, but after he counted the screws it was clear that some of them were missing making it impossible to assemble. He became really upset and I told him it's totally fine. There are only two options. We contact customer service for a replacement or we go to the hardware store and see if they have the parts we need. He was so frustrated that he didn't want to listen. I'm saddened that he's so overwhelmed by parenting he can't problem solve any situation and I carry the whole mental load.Anonymous wrote:Some specific examples would help.
Your example doesn't show that he's not putting effort into being a parent. It shows someone who is probably trying to be absolutely perfect and sweating the small stuff.
Anonymous wrote:I had a rough time with my kids when they were little like yours, I probably walked around just like your husband.
As soon as I could start having conversations with the kids it all kind of turned around for me and now being with them is a joy.
You sound like a really nice woman but You need to stop making him happy by sacrificing what you need and want, it’s only going to lead to distance, frustration and the eventual collapse of intimacy and then your marriage.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:I'm hoping this is it! It's been rough for both of us. My mom says our kid is like 2 in 1 with all that energy and no way to communicate. I just want us to view this as an obstacle we have to overcome as a team. Us versus parenting. We genuinely enjoy our time together. When we go on vacation without the baby or even just get a night a way, we go back to how we were when we were dating. I really enjoy his company.Anonymous wrote:I had a rough time with my kids when they were little like yours, I probably walked around just like your husband.
As soon as I could start having conversations with the kids it all kind of turned around for me and now being with them is a joy.
You sound like a really nice woman but You need to stop making him happy by sacrificing what you need and want, it’s only going to lead to distance, frustration and the eventual collapse of intimacy and then your marriage.
Ask me how I know.
Anonymous wrote:He does get easily frustrated with the baby for not sleeping or for crying when literally everything has been optimized. I feel his pain. We have a tough kid. I've been around a lot of children and I know our baby is simply harder than others. I take all the night wake ups and do all the diaper changes even if he's home.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He likes to put things together so I asked him to get a baby gate. We ordered online and the gate seemed to be brand new, but after he counted the screws it was clear that some of them were missing making it impossible to assemble. He became really upset and I told him it's totally fine. There are only two options. We contact customer service for a replacement or we go to the hardware store and see if they have the parts we need. He was so frustrated that he didn't want to listen. I'm saddened that he's so overwhelmed by parenting he can't problem solve any situation and I carry the whole mental load.Anonymous wrote:Some specific examples would help.
He was making a big deal over nothing. You are making it a BIGGER deal over nothing. Get off DCUM and go take care of your baby.
+1000. I was expecting something totally different like getting upset at the baby for crying, having to get up during the night, not getting to sleep in on the weekend, complaining about not being able to hang out with the boys. Your husband has a moment of frustration and loses it over something silly as we all do, and suddenly he's the terrible and disappointing father. WTF?