Anonymous wrote:
When your monster is calm, you sit down and tell them that this cannot continue. That they have anger management problems and control problems, and that it's making your life and your kids' life a living hell on earth. That you refuse, from now on, to continue like this until they make progress in therapy with anger management. You expect them to get evaluated for ADHD, and take meds if they have a diagnosis. It will help them with organization and time-keeping, and also with emotional control (this is all scientifically proven). If they don't this, you will not work with them on activities, and you will consider a divorce.
Anonymous wrote:What is his reason for not using a google calendar? Its the tool to make sure everyone knows whats going on during the week?
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how so many plans change late on a regular basis. My upper elementary kid is currently in a bunch of activities (unusual for him) and only one has a bit of fluidity to it. Even when my kid was only in 1-2 activities a week, it was rare for plans to change. Everyone's time is valuable...why so many last minute changes? But yes, one parent holding all of the scheduling cards is not positive for the whole family...especially as the kids get older and need to start managing their own schedules (which I'm helping my own kid do now).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do some parents never want to spend any time with their children? I know parents like this and it’s a huge red flag for me. They are terrified they might have to hang out at home with their kids with “nothing” to do. Literally afraid.
OP here. This is not at issue - both spouse and I spend gobs of time with the kids on weekends and workdays, to and from school and activities whenever we can, and in the evenings, etc.. During downtime, I am content to do "nothing" with them and my overscheduler spouse predictably likes to never be at the house and bop from activity to activity (but always with me and the kids). No one has working mom guilt or is avoiding the kids. The actual issue is two-fold: 1 - a disconnect on how busy the kids should be and - 2- the constant, often last-minute, changes and lack of communication with me and our nanny about the schedule, + all the yelling. TBH, we are mostly aligned on 1 (I do think the kids should be occupied with an activity on most days, especially the older ones), but 2 is unbearable. And relatedly, if something gets canceled or moved, I think that time should get to stay open and a canceled activity does not need to get stuffed into another time slot that week. Canceled plans can be a blessing!
Anonymous wrote:Why do some parents never want to spend any time with their children? I know parents like this and it’s a huge red flag for me. They are terrified they might have to hang out at home with their kids with “nothing” to do. Literally afraid.
Anonymous wrote:Why do some parents never want to spend any time with their children? I know parents like this and it’s a huge red flag for me. They are terrified they might have to hang out at home with their kids with “nothing” to do. Literally afraid.