Anonymous wrote:If he's that lazy, he might not even want the kids half of the time in a divorce. He'll be that dad who never shows up for his time with the kids. I'm a single mom who does everything and I wouldn't be able to stand having a lazy man around the house like that. But just be careful. Nobody can force a parent to parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He works from home and can't get dinner on before you get back or unload the dishwasher?
Correct
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He works from home and can't get dinner on before you get back or unload the dishwasher?
Correct
Anonymous wrote:He works from home and can't get dinner on before you get back or unload the dishwasher?
Anonymous wrote:The only thing he helps out with is their bath time?
Anonymous wrote:So no tradeoff where you can do whatever in the afternoons or whatever?
I'm confused too - at what point does he engage with the kids if he's sleeping or doing his own thing for the rest of the day?
Anonymous wrote:This sounds beyond hope. I have a lovely husband who did lots of things, but it was very hard for him when I decided the division of labor had to change for getting up with our special needs kid. The division of labor had worked for a long time, but as I aged, I couldn’t do the vast majority of the wake ups. He really couldn’t hear me for about 18 months and I was really unhappy. I finally told him I was so desperate for sleep that I was looking at renting a studio to sleep in every other night.
We have been 50/50 on wake ups since then. I hate that it took so long to get him there, but he also was generally doing lots of other things. Your dude sounds like a jerk.