Anonymous wrote:One thing I have not seen asked: if the kids are not doing chores or cleaning up after themselves, who is? You? Or DH? I would make sure the answer is “DH”. Definitely NOT you. If they make a mess, he should be cleaning it. If the kids are out of clean clothing because they did not do their laundry- that is their problem (and if they want to complain, they should complain to their dad about why their laundry is not done). Etc. Same applies to any other things that DH lets go. If he wants to make that choice then fine- but then HE needs to be the one to deal with any consequences.
I would take responsibility for the dog yourself obviously.
Rest assured that many teens who are messy and don’t do any chores still end up being responsible and normal adults. To me, this is more a problem for the parents. Let it be DH’s problem and not yours.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid is going to be okay. OP. Lots of teens don’t do chores and they turn out okay. Does he do his homework, show up on time when he needs to, say thank you when you make him a snack? If so he’s got the building blocks.
The dog is now yours. Congratulations! You are a dog’s favorite person.
Maybe ask your son to do tasks that you control entirely or that impact your son, and when your husband isn’t around. So ask him to come do the dishes while you are cooking - right in the moment. Or if you are doing his laundry, teach him how and then tell him he is responsible for it. If he drives, put some money in his account and give him the shopping list. Do these in the moment as opportunities allow, not as a standing chore you need to nag about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry. That sucks.
I am a stepmom and my husband thinks his late teen kids should do zero chores. I think it is really poor parenting. I've always thought that I was the mom I could have raised them to do better, but it had not occurred to me that even if I was the mom the dad might try to undercut me and be the good cop!
Hasn't he ever heard the phrase "happy wife happy life"??
He should be backing you up.
I think you should tell DH and the kid that you will no longer be caring for the dog and that if they don't step up and care for the dog, you will re home her.
Why did you marry him if you disagree with his parenting? Serious question, this is always baffling to me.
I assume they didn't have kids before getting married. People change their minds and are more agreeable at the beginning.
Aren't you lucky you both figured it all out and he kept his word. Mine stopped talking. Imagine that. Silent treatment all the way. You think we discussed it before and I was fine with it?
Anonymous wrote:The dynamic between you and your husband would drive me crazy. But your kid will be fine. He will not never keep his word because dad didn’t make him take care of a dog he promised to help with (which was dumb to act on such a promise from someone so young because they don’t likely have the capacity to think it through). He will not never follow through or be responsible. You’re trying to turn this into a catastrophic and life altering event for your kid when it’s just a frustrating husband problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm sorry. That sucks.
I am a stepmom and my husband thinks his late teen kids should do zero chores. I think it is really poor parenting. I've always thought that I was the mom I could have raised them to do better, but it had not occurred to me that even if I was the mom the dad might try to undercut me and be the good cop!
Hasn't he ever heard the phrase "happy wife happy life"??
He should be backing you up.
I think you should tell DH and the kid that you will no longer be caring for the dog and that if they don't step up and care for the dog, you will re home her.
Why did you marry him if you disagree with his parenting? Serious question, this is always baffling to me.
Anonymous wrote:I would argue with my husband. You have an obligation to make sure your kid is raised well. If that means I disagree with my spouse then so be it.
My husband and I parent slightly different but we believe the same basic things. Kids need chores and responsibility, kids need consequences.
Ideally you should have investigated your husband's values before you married him. I do have an adult cousin who hated his mom for having so many rules when his dad did not. He said his mom was not cool.
As an adult he thanks his mom. Weirdly he raises his kids the way his mom raised him, not his dad. Loving but not overly permissive.