Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the introvert and less fun one and would be so sad if my husband thought of me as a burden in this way. He should be in my corner.
How did you behave when you had young kids to raise? Or tweens? Or teens?
Just stay inside and knit, wish them well for the weekend?
No. You suck up and parent, teach, coach, develop, show.
Uh no. Good parenting does not equal socializing with all the neighbors all the time. GMAB.
Didn’t catch that, what did you do for 18 years of child raising?
Made sure I went to every social event with copious amounts of beer and alcohol? /s
I mean what else do you do at a St. Patrick's Day party?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the introvert and less fun one and would be so sad if my husband thought of me as a burden in this way. He should be in my corner.
How did you behave when you had young kids to raise? Or tweens? Or teens?
Just stay inside and knit, wish them well for the weekend?
No. You suck up and parent, teach, coach, develop, show.
Uh no. Good parenting does not equal socializing with all the neighbors all the time. GMAB.
Didn’t catch that, what did you do for 18 years of child raising?
Anonymous wrote:I’m the introvert in our marriage, and I still get invited to a lot more things (book clubs, girls nights, parties, etc) than DH does. These things are typically only women, and the men don’t seem to do as much. 10-15 years ago, when our oldest kids were little, DH used to get together with other men to go golfing or play video games. But something has shifted, and it’s like men aren’t allowed to socialize without their families anymore.
I don’t know what’s going on with the parties. I was just thinking that I hosted a party yesterday, and I didn’t invite everyone in my book club. I’m the introvert, so I focused on inviting the families of my kids’ friends. And when you invite families, the numbers add up quickly. I invited 6 friends, 4 of them came with their families, and there were a total of 24 people here last night. It could have looked like a big party, but it wasn’t.
My thought is that if you want to get invited more often, then you need to host more. You kind of have to make a little group that you are a member of. Like, “oh, we can’t invite Mary without also inviting Melissa.”
Anyway, I doubt it’s an issue with your husband. The men aren’t the ones organizing these things.
Anonymous wrote:It’s St Paddy’s day, NOT Patty.
Anonymous wrote:We live in a neighborhood where every couple is like the OP - the wives socialize with each other while the husbands stay home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the introvert and less fun one and would be so sad if my husband thought of me as a burden in this way. He should be in my corner.
How did you behave when you had young kids to raise? Or tweens? Or teens?
Just stay inside and knit, wish them well for the weekend?
No. You suck up and parent, teach, coach, develop, show.
Uh no. Good parenting does not equal socializing with all the neighbors all the time. GMAB.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am the introvert and less fun one and would be so sad if my husband thought of me as a burden in this way. He should be in my corner.
How did you behave when you had young kids to raise? Or tweens? Or teens?
Just stay inside and knit, wish them well for the weekend?
No. You suck up and parent, teach, coach, develop, show.