?Anonymous wrote:This is DH busy time of year and he is gone 5-6 days a week on-site at different locations. It’s been going on since late-September and thankfully we are in the home stretch; he will be done before Thanksgiving. This is nothing new to me but for whatever reason I am having a really hard time this cycle. Maybe it’s because our kids are older? Seems counterintuitive and I can’t explain it, but it’s like their needs are easier yet somehow “more”. I WFH and actually have a lot of quiet breaks throughout my day, but I still find my evenings exhausting. I’m tired emotionally and physically by the end of the day. I find that I DO spend a lot of energy giving the kids extra attention in their dad’s absence, so this could be part of it.
They are older (10, 12) so there is no “putting them to bed”. They’ll head to their rooms at 9:30, but they are awake in there and will come out for water or the bathroom. I don’t know how it would be different in this aspect if DH were here, but it just stands out to me.
I guess my question is, what are some small ways you parent differently or ways you find to relax yourself, to make things easier?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love to see moms supporting moms! Bravo, DCUM! Yet again another thread where everyone thinks their own struggles are a flex! Bravo for having the hardest time! You win!
Come on! OP's children are self sufficient but she can't handle their emotional needs. What has she been doing the last ten years! Many women do it all by themselves without incessant whining.
NP -![]()
Come on. Plenty of tweens, especially right now, face challenging social/emotional situations that require parental guidance. The OP isn't talking about the grunt work of little kids; it's the emotional support that's the issue here. Yes, it's a lot to handle on your own for months at a stretch. Frankly, when I hear parents of tweens brag about how little their kids need them, I figure the kids know their parents either can't handle or don't care about helping them with the social/emotional stuff, so they don't tell them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love to see moms supporting moms! Bravo, DCUM! Yet again another thread where everyone thinks their own struggles are a flex! Bravo for having the hardest time! You win!
Come on! OP's children are self sufficient but she can't handle their emotional needs. What has she been doing the last ten years! Many women do it all by themselves without incessant whining.
NP -![]()
Come on. Plenty of tweens, especially right now, face challenging social/emotional situations that require parental guidance. The OP isn't talking about the grunt work of little kids; it's the emotional support that's the issue here. Yes, it's a lot to handle on your own for months at a stretch. Frankly, when I hear parents of tweens brag about how little their kids need them, I figure the kids know their parents either can't handle or don't care about helping them with the social/emotional stuff, so they don't tell them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Love to see moms supporting moms! Bravo, DCUM! Yet again another thread where everyone thinks their own struggles are a flex! Bravo for having the hardest time! You win!
Come on! OP's children are self sufficient but she can't handle their emotional needs. What has she been doing the last ten years! Many women do it all by themselves without incessant whining.
Anonymous wrote:Love to see moms supporting moms! Bravo, DCUM! Yet again another thread where everyone thinks their own struggles are a flex! Bravo for having the hardest time! You win!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:^ agree. NP here. At 10 & 12 they should be self sufficient.
They are self sufficient, I think it’s just the emotional needs and the drain on me doing it all by myself.
Anonymous wrote:See if you can plan a sleepover for them at a friend's house. You might let down your guard a little better if they're actually away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, am I understanding that the issue is that you have to "on" all the time? Like any time a stressful situation with middle school comes up (and oh do they come up) you need to be ready to deal with and diffuse tween angst? And since the kids are up late, you don't feel like there's any "after bedtime" relaxation?
Yes! This is OP and it’s absolutely this!
I’m not trying to undermine or discredit single parents or those who have been there/done that, but like I said for whatever reason it’s hitting me hard this time around. Thank you for your understanding!
Anonymous wrote:This is DH busy time of year and he is gone 5-6 days a week on-site at different locations. It’s been going on since late-September and thankfully we are in the home stretch; he will be done before Thanksgiving. This is nothing new to me but for whatever reason I am having a really hard time this cycle. Maybe it’s because our kids are older? Seems counterintuitive and I can’t explain it, but it’s like their needs are easier yet somehow “more”. I WFH and actually have a lot of quiet breaks throughout my day, but I still find my evenings exhausting. I’m tired emotionally and physically by the end of the day. I find that I DO spend a lot of energy giving the kids extra attention in their dad’s absence, so this could be part of it.
They are older (10, 12) so there is no “putting them to bed”. They’ll head to their rooms at 9:30, but they are awake in there and will come out for water or the bathroom. I don’t know how it would be different in this aspect if DH were here, but it just stands out to me.
I guess my question is, what are some small ways you parent differently or ways you find to relax yourself, to make things easier?