Anonymous wrote:He sounds a little lazy and selfish*, but overall his plan is fine.
But there is a big difference between ECs and birthday parties.
His preferences are not a reason for your kids to lack social skills, fun, and friends.
*and honestly, this worries me in the long-term
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH thinks that our kids do not really need to go to playdate, parties, classes etc since they have beforecare + school + aftercare (7am to 6pm Mon to Fri). He does not think they need any other planned activities, and weekend is supposed to be family time. And, his family time meaning kids playing with themselves on weekend morning and he is sleeping till 11am , and we family may go out to eat lunch or do grocery shopping/playground afterwards.
I have never seen him playing any sports (basketball, soccer or swimming etc) with our kids, and he says because it is because he does not care about those sports. However, he is willing to read them some books, play board game with them, take them to playground in the afternoon (because he is not a morning person), or we all watch family movie together. He calls this family time.
pP again.
Same dynamic here, no talking or coaching or teaching moments. Easier to watch a movie or read a book aloud. No thinking or connection or real interaction needed. Very hands off. We have daughters so I have to compensate for the lack of social skills from one parent. We have created many orbits of friends now in later elementary, but my anti-social spouse still cannt name half their friends or parents they’ve had for five years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH thinks that our kids do not really need to go to playdate, parties, classes etc since they have beforecare + school + aftercare (7am to 6pm Mon to Fri). He does not think they need any other planned activities, and weekend is supposed to be family time. And, his family time meaning kids playing with themselves on weekend morning and he is sleeping till 11am , and we family may go out to eat lunch or do grocery shopping/playground afterwards.
I have never seen him playing any sports (basketball, soccer or swimming etc) with our kids, and he says because it is because he does not care about those sports. However, he is willing to read them some books, play board game with them, take them to playground in the afternoon (because he is not a morning person), or we all watch family movie together. He calls this family time.
I agree with your husband. Your kids are busy enough. Maybe when they are older they will express an interest in something but, until then..enjoy!
Anonymous wrote:My DH thinks that our kids do not really need to go to playdate, parties, classes etc since they have beforecare + school + aftercare (7am to 6pm Mon to Fri). He does not think they need any other planned activities, and weekend is supposed to be family time. And, his family time meaning kids playing with themselves on weekend morning and he is sleeping till 11am , and we family may go out to eat lunch or do grocery shopping/playground afterwards.
I have never seen him playing any sports (basketball, soccer or swimming etc) with our kids, and he says because it is because he does not care about those sports. However, he is willing to read them some books, play board game with them, take them to playground in the afternoon (because he is not a morning person), or we all watch family movie together. He calls this family time.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Well, I say yes to all playdate or birthday invites if I can, and I am the one taking the kid to attend, and he can stay home with the other kid.
Kids wake up early on weekends (same schedule as weekdays) and the most I can do is telling them not to bug me till 8am on weekend. They have a lot of energy, and the weekday schedule (7am to 6pm) do not exhaust them at all. They need to eat breakfast and they want to do something.
I go against his weekend family time wishes, so he does not want to do much with kids later on for the rest of day because I "ruin" his plan. A lot of time, I cannot make it to home by noon to start his weekend family time plan because I sometimes take them to playdate/parties/festival/events/playground in the morning and seasonal swimming/soccer/dance class and they last past noon.
I don't understand, even though I come back home at 1pm, why can't he still continue his weekend family plan? Instead, he would rather do his own thing because he says I already overschedule kids and they need down time which is they play by themselves. And, that also mean I give them ipad/computer (I used up my energy in the morning) or I take them to backyard to play if I still have any energy. He also let kids to choose they want to do for down down which is either play boardgame or play computer/ipad, of course kids would pick computer/ipad. And, that means he could sleep in till 11am, and we come home late then he can does his own things because he says kids do not want him or need him.
Anonymous wrote:1. Are your kids asking for more planned activities? If so, maybe let them choose one each.
2. There should be some parties and playdates but it's reasonable to put a cap on how many for family sanity.
3. I don't get the point of your last paragraph. You're mad your husband wants to play boardgames/read books/take the kids to the playground rather than play specific sports with them? If you think it's important that they play those sports, i guess you'll have to teach them yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds nice. Appreciate what you have.
It sounds to me like she has a lazy DH who does little with his kids. She mentions that he doesn't play with the kids and he sleeps in. He doesn't plan activities on the weekend for the family to do. I would read that as she is picking up caring for the kids and planning things while he is not doing anything.
I would not appreciate that in the least bit.
There is this thing called balance. You can let each kid choose one activity so that they have something that they enjoy doing outside of school. But the idea that the kids are chill at home while Dad doesn't sound like the reality.