Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He should bring some freebies like hotel pens, pads, airplane socks, snack. And then mix it up with postcards or a small trinket. He should spend 4 minutes so that his kid knows he loves her and thinks about her.
OP and that was my argument. And he still said he didn’t have time. They literally hand you half that stuff on the plane. Give the kid a pad of paper with a foreign city on it and she’d be happy for a week.
Like everything with men:
If he wanted to, he would.
He doesn’t think your kid is worth the effort.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He should bring some freebies like hotel pens, pads, airplane socks, snack. And then mix it up with postcards or a small trinket. He should spend 4 minutes so that his kid knows he loves her and thinks about her.
OP and that was my argument. And he still said he didn’t have time. They literally hand you half that stuff on the plane. Give the kid a pad of paper with a foreign city on it and she’d be happy for a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He should bring some freebies like hotel pens, pads, airplane socks, snack. And then mix it up with postcards or a small trinket. He should spend 4 minutes so that his kid knows he loves her and thinks about her.
OP and that was my argument. And he still said he didn’t have time. They literally hand you half that stuff on the plane. Give the kid a pad of paper with a foreign city on it and she’d be happy for a week.
Is he really going where he says he’s going?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He should bring some freebies like hotel pens, pads, airplane socks, snack. And then mix it up with postcards or a small trinket. He should spend 4 minutes so that his kid knows he loves her and thinks about her.
OP and that was my argument. And he still said he didn’t have time. They literally hand you half that stuff on the plane. Give the kid a pad of paper with a foreign city on it and she’d be happy for a week.
Anonymous wrote:He should bring some freebies like hotel pens, pads, airplane socks, snack. And then mix it up with postcards or a small trinket. He should spend 4 minutes so that his kid knows he loves her and thinks about her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mom and don’t like FaceTiming while traveling either, and I’m definitely not having an affair. My workaround is to send/receive video messages. I do always bring them something.
As someone who is really bad at videos, I think that’s way more work than FaceTiming! And my DD would watch it over and over. -OP
PP here. There are no good and bad videos home to kids! It’s not like I script them. My biggest hits though have been reviews of my hotel room when I’ve gotten a bad one — I do a commercial and try to convince the viewer to stay in the sewage motel.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a mom and don’t like FaceTiming while traveling either, and I’m definitely not having an affair. My workaround is to send/receive video messages. I do always bring them something.
As someone who is really bad at videos, I think that’s way more work than FaceTiming! And my DD would watch it over and over. -OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t mean something big. More like a postcard, a hotel one, a unique local candy, etc.
DH always used to being DD something on trips. Recently he’s stopped. DD is really hurt. He’s also stopped texting or FaceTiming during trips. He’s argued that there isn’t time and he’s too busy.
I traveled extensively for work until DD was in K and there was never a time that I couldn’t at least get a cute cocktail stirrer from a lounge bartender or a postcard from the hotel stationary drawer. FaceTime was sometimes hard when the time difference was weird but when I knew it would be really off I would leave a note to open for each day.
I think DH needs to step it up. These are 7-8 day trips that include weekend days and he’s missing a lot. He’s flying in business and first fwiw.
What do you think, traveling parents?
No OP you are wrong
He’s working it’s not play time
Why does your kid need gifts all the time?
Anonymous wrote:Frequent traveler here. On business trips, I"m too busy to Facetime and make it work timezone-wise. Day-long meeting or conferences, then business dinners, then after that I have to deal with emails from back at the office so I am lucky to get 6 hours of sleep a night. It's not all fun and games.
I bring back something if my kids specifically ask for it (like a Labubu doll), or some funky food item, but I do that may half of the time at most. My kids aren't too interested in anything I may bring back from Boise or Calgary, for example.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a mom and don’t like FaceTiming while traveling either, and I’m definitely not having an affair. My workaround is to send/receive video messages. I do always bring them something.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t mean something big. More like a postcard, a hotel one, a unique local candy, etc.
DH always used to being DD something on trips. Recently he’s stopped. DD is really hurt. He’s also stopped texting or FaceTiming during trips. He’s argued that there isn’t time and he’s too busy.
I traveled extensively for work until DD was in K and there was never a time that I couldn’t at least get a cute cocktail stirrer from a lounge bartender or a postcard from the hotel stationary drawer. FaceTime was sometimes hard when the time difference was weird but when I knew it would be really off I would leave a note to open for each day.
I think DH needs to step it up. These are 7-8 day trips that include weekend days and he’s missing a lot. He’s flying in business and first fwiw.
What do you think, traveling parents?