Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
That’s just a stereotype and stereotypes are ignorant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s that boomers didn’t make their husbands do anything. My mom went on and on about how my dad never changed a diaper. When I had my kids, he quietly learned how to change a diaper and changed my kids if they were wet when he was playing with them (often. He saw them daily). He told me my mom criticized everything he did and didn’t let him.
Millennial men step up. They still might be lacking on emotional labor things like planning holidays or even cleaning a home. But I see mostly men at daycare pickup and drop offs. I was at an elementary school field trip today and it was half dads as chaperones. Men are at the playground en masse on the weekends with their kids.
My dh rarely makes bottles. I EBF at home and on weekends, but pump for daycare. I make all the bottles because I have a way of mixing the milk and I made it all so I remember which bottle was morning milk, etc.
Lol to this comment. Can we just talk about what you did here?
It's boomers fault, but not all boomers -- just women. Women are responsible for deciding what their husbands do.
My dad is actually a competent parent but my mother simply never let him do anything, which is why he didn't.
Millenial men are way better, they do way more. I mean not planning things or cleaning things, but high visibility/low effort things like taking their kids to and from school or standing looking at their phone while their kids play at playgrounds.
I don't let my husband feed our baby or have anything to do with bottles because only I know how to do it and he would just screw it up (twist! you're your mom!).
It's like you looked up a list of every misogynist trope about women and parenting and were trying to score a Yahtzee or something.
Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
It's changing, I think. But in general: yes.
When we had our first I remember the first time we went out to brunch I was babywearing her, when she got fussy I took her out of the restaurant, I fed her, I got her to fall sleep, and then I handed her over to her dad to hold her so I could eat. The moment, the literal minute, that he sat down with her in his arms a waitress from another table came over and told him he was the Father of the Year. For holding a sleeping child. The same child I had been wrangling with no recognition for the better part of an hour. Luckily all the people at our table were parents and the moms and dads all had the same "the bar is in Hell" reaction, because if he had been receptive to that level of praise for that level of effort I probably would have resented it deeply.
I had the same experience! I was taking care of the baby for an extended period of time, which is NORMAL, and within 10 minutes of my husband just holding her while she looked around calmly an older lady came by and gushed over how amazing he was. For holding his own child. I don’t think men realize how unbelievably low the bar is most of the time but that time my husband was dumbstruck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
It's changing, I think. But in general: yes.
When we had our first I remember the first time we went out to brunch I was babywearing her, when she got fussy I took her out of the restaurant, I fed her, I got her to fall sleep, and then I handed her over to her dad to hold her so I could eat. The moment, the literal minute, that he sat down with her in his arms a waitress from another table came over and told him he was the Father of the Year. For holding a sleeping child. The same child I had been wrangling with no recognition for the better part of an hour. Luckily all the people at our table were parents and the moms and dads all had the same "the bar is in Hell" reaction, because if he had been receptive to that level of praise for that level of effort I probably would have resented it deeply.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s that boomers didn’t make their husbands do anything. My mom went on and on about how my dad never changed a diaper. When I had my kids, he quietly learned how to change a diaper and changed my kids if they were wet when he was playing with them (often. He saw them daily). He told me my mom criticized everything he did and didn’t let him.
Millennial men step up. They still might be lacking on emotional labor things like planning holidays or even cleaning a home. But I see mostly men at daycare pickup and drop offs. I was at an elementary school field trip today and it was half dads as chaperones. Men are at the playground en masse on the weekends with their kids.
My dh rarely makes bottles. I EBF at home and on weekends, but pump for daycare. I make all the bottles because I have a way of mixing the milk and I made it all so I remember which bottle was morning milk, etc.
Anonymous wrote:Had a kid recently and people are impressed I know how to make a bottle saying a lot of fathers don’t. Seems wild.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s that boomers didn’t make their husbands do anything. My mom went on and on about how my dad never changed a diaper. When I had my kids, he quietly learned how to change a diaper and changed my kids if they were wet when he was playing with them (often. He saw them daily). He told me my mom criticized everything he did and didn’t let him.
Millennial men step up. They still might be lacking on emotional labor things like planning holidays or even cleaning a home. But I see mostly men at daycare pickup and drop offs. I was at an elementary school field trip today and it was half dads as chaperones. Men are at the playground en masse on the weekends with their kids.
My dh rarely makes bottles. I EBF at home and on weekends, but pump for daycare. I make all the bottles because I have a way of mixing the milk and I made it all so I remember which bottle was morning milk, etc.
A lot of these men had to be yelled at by their wives to start parenting their children. Then they started stepping up but still resent their wives for not thinking they are God's gift to women because they do 40% of the parenting and housework and bring in 50% of the household income.
No they didn't. Enough with your main character syndrome. Stop projecting your life experiences as if they're typical. They're not.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, definitely. I'm (F) divorced and my ex and I coparent 50/50 and live a block apart. We have two daughters and because CANNOT BELIEVE that he puts their hair in ponytails, draws with them, takes them to activities/appointments, or rides bikes with them to school.
The neighbors all offer to take the kids/invite them over for playdates on his weekends. On my weekends, they send their kids down to my house to ring my bell and ask if they can come in.
He volunteers at school and the moms all get giddy and throw themselves at him - the dad who volunteers at school! Oh my!
He is publicly praised ALL THE TIME for what an amazing dad he is, that he stayed involved after divorce, etc.
When in reality, our kids lives were ripped apart because he is a chronic liar and cheater. He volunteered at school because he was unemployed for 10 months. He rides bikes with them because he lost his license in a DUI.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it’s that boomers didn’t make their husbands do anything. My mom went on and on about how my dad never changed a diaper. When I had my kids, he quietly learned how to change a diaper and changed my kids if they were wet when he was playing with them (often. He saw them daily). He told me my mom criticized everything he did and didn’t let him.
Millennial men step up. They still might be lacking on emotional labor things like planning holidays or even cleaning a home. But I see mostly men at daycare pickup and drop offs. I was at an elementary school field trip today and it was half dads as chaperones. Men are at the playground en masse on the weekends with their kids.
My dh rarely makes bottles. I EBF at home and on weekends, but pump for daycare. I make all the bottles because I have a way of mixing the milk and I made it all so I remember which bottle was morning milk, etc.
A lot of these men had to be yelled at by their wives to start parenting their children. Then they started stepping up but still resent their wives for not thinking they are God's gift to women because they do 40% of the parenting and housework and bring in 50% of the household income.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, the standards are very low. It's good you recognize it. Never let those low standards allow you to lower your own standards.
Also it's good to be aware of exactly how HIGH the standards for your wife are. Like as you are getting pats on the back for knowing how to make a bottle, your wife is over there being judged for literally every aspect of parenting even the crap she could not possibly control even if she tried.
If you understand this dynamic, it will save you a lot of marital strain. You can start now by telling her, tonight, how impressed you are with what it took for her to have this baby and what a great mom she's already shaping up to be. Like pay forward those compliments you received for putting together a single bottle (and that you will receive for simply being seen in public with your child, buying food at the grocery store, simply knowing your child's teacher's names, etc.) and give them to your wife who will NEVER get a compliment for any of that stuff and will instead be criticized for doing it wrong no matter how she does it.