Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
I posted above about being home for several years and then returning to a flexible job. This has definitely been an issue for us. I know more about autism and have stronger relationships with our providers, so all the decision making falls on me. It's definitely a source of resentment.
Or the dad checks out of the information flow and stops researching, but still wants to have decisionmaking power anyway, based on his gut instincts and general vibes. Also annoying. The nice thing about both working is it can force the dad to carry more of the SN load so he doesn't wander away from it. Because once he's out of it, he'll be very defensive about that.
Not just annoying, but toxic AF and present in about 99% of men.
the dad checks out of the information flow and stops researching, but still wants to have decisionmaking power anyway, based on his gut instincts and general vibes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
This has happened to us because DH doesn’t want to do the work about learning about our SN kid, unpacking his own triggers, and not triggering the kid constantly. It’s freaking awful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's not a reason this is in the kids with special needs forum, I would ask Jeff to move it to relationships or off topic
I’m OP. Guess I should have explained. I am concerned that my wife will discover that it is more stressful than she expected but not feel at liberty to say so. We have a son with autism who is awesome but can be challenging in many respects.
I would encourage her to try another job first and be ok with slightly lower pay for less stress or a better commute. Being with a challenging child 24/7 is really hard, and it can be hard to get back into the workforce later. I was never a Sahm but had some weekends when I couldn't wait to go to work because no one would be having hours-long tantrums. Also, the economy is getting worse for white collar employees (assuming you are one) and I wouldn't feel comfortable with one income because of the possibility of job loss. But every one is different.
I would suggest DH do this to pick up the slack instead.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
I posted above about being home for several years and then returning to a flexible job. This has definitely been an issue for us. I know more about autism and have stronger relationships with our providers, so all the decision making falls on me. It's definitely a source of resentment.
Or the dad checks out of the information flow and stops researching, but still wants to have decisionmaking power anyway, based on his gut instincts and general vibes. Also annoying. The nice thing about both working is it can force the dad to carry more of the SN load so he doesn't wander away from it. Because once he's out of it, he'll be very defensive about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
I posted above about being home for several years and then returning to a flexible job. This has definitely been an issue for us. I know more about autism and have stronger relationships with our providers, so all the decision making falls on me. It's definitely a source of resentment.
Or the dad checks out of the information flow and stops researching, but still wants to have decisionmaking power anyway, based on his gut instincts and general vibes. Also annoying. The nice thing about both working is it can force the dad to carry more of the SN load so he doesn't wander away from it. Because once he's out of it, he'll be very defensive about that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If there's not a reason this is in the kids with special needs forum, I would ask Jeff to move it to relationships or off topic
I’m OP. Guess I should have explained. I am concerned that my wife will discover that it is more stressful than she expected but not feel at liberty to say so. We have a son with autism who is awesome but can be challenging in many respects.
I would encourage her to try another job first and be ok with slightly lower pay for less stress or a better commute. Being with a challenging child 24/7 is really hard, and it can be hard to get back into the workforce later. I was never a Sahm but had some weekends when I couldn't wait to go to work because no one would be having hours-long tantrums. Also, the economy is getting worse for white collar employees (assuming you are one) and I wouldn't feel comfortable with one income because of the possibility of job loss. But every one is different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
I posted above about being home for several years and then returning to a flexible job. This has definitely been an issue for us. I know more about autism and have stronger relationships with our providers, so all the decision making falls on me. It's definitely a source of resentment.
Anonymous wrote:I think one of the pitfalls is the mom becomes more and more immersed in SN parenting and starts basically doing it solo and the dad checks out more and more because he doesn't understand all the therapies and terms and such and doesn't really want to be an expert on it anyway. So you kind of grow apart.
Financially how is this if your child may need support in adulthood?
Anonymous wrote:It sounds like DW if very overwhelmed right now. She can't quit her family, so the logical thing to do is quit the job. Not sure how old or sever DC is.
My question would be did she used to love her job? Did it fulfill her? If the answer is yes...then I do not think it would be good to quit.
Not to pile on, but maybe have a "divide and conquer" conversation. If she is doing most of the heavy lifting, it makes sense she is unsatisfied.
Kids are hard. Kids with special needs are exponentially harder. Everyone needs an outlet, and honestly mine is my job.