Anonymous wrote:SO frustrated with spouse right now. Here's the scenario: long weekend. Two kids. I suggest we get out of town for some time away with kids and chance to enjoy being out of the city. He says I don't want to do suggestion A, B, or C; I want to stay in DC so I can go into the office over the long weekend. (He does not usually work weekends, so this is news to me.) I say okay, then I'm fine going somewhere with kids by myself. He counters with "but I never get to do anything with the kids and I don't want to miss out on the fun stuff!" Well, YOU DON'T WANT US TO DO ANY FUN STUFF. YOU WANT US ALL TO SIT HOME SO YOU CAN SPEND TIME IN THE OFFICE. I have no idea what the compromise position is here. The kids stay home and get to do nothing different than same old same old, so he doesn't miss out? There is no offer of going some other time; it's just "I don't want to, so no one should because then I might miss what I don't want to do anyway."
Help.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This really changes the whole situation. If this is the only chance you have to get the heck outta Dodge for the summer then take the opportunity and go. It sucks for him but that's life. As a parent, he can't play the "if I don't have fun, no one has fun" game anymore.
Eh, I'm not really getting that vibe from the DH. What I'm getting is that for some reason he feels obligated to put some hours in at work. (I'm guessing he's the breadwinner.) And OP wants to go somewhere and if DH has to work, then screw him. Add to this that apparently the calendar is so crammed in advance that there is no other option for anyone to choose anything beyond what has been scheduled weeks in advance. This last part is what tips me towards DH. OP is saying that, "yeah this is the only weekend off for weeks but since you need to work we're leaving town without you."
I think a compromise is in order, and that if the calendar is truly that full then the family should stay in the area and do something together.
Anonymous wrote:This really changes the whole situation. If this is the only chance you have to get the heck outta Dodge for the summer then take the opportunity and go. It sucks for him but that's life. As a parent, he can't play the "if I don't have fun, no one has fun" game anymore.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. This is the only weekend this summer without an in-town commitment on the calendar. Not something I realized until I saw the latest sports schedule come out. We both work, so these weekends are precious to me.
I do want to go OUT of town this weekend. A short day trip can be done some other weekend. Actually leaving town really can't because of other commitments, unless we ditch those commitments (which he is reluctant to do, of course).
I am not claiming that it's either go out of town or be locked in the house. Sure we could do stuff around town, but I am looking for out of town as in out into nature, exploring, hiking, being away from the crowds. Not something we rush to do so we can cram it in as a day trip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. He is stressed out about work and I can understand why he's thinking that a couple of hours at the office out of the long weekend is not a big deal, because he has four days off. So a few hours out of four days seems like no big deal to him.
But here's his history: "I want to do fun stuff with the kids. I don't want to miss out. Why do you get to do fun stuff with the kids?" Well, I get to do fun stuff with the kids because (1) I make plans to do so and (2) I execute those plans. I am flexible enough that I can decide that if my ideal scenario is three hours at the office on Saturday morning, I can adjust my thinking and understand that three hours on Sunday afternoon would be fine as well, and would mean that the rest of the family doesn't have to limit their plans to fit around my fixed idea.
This is the same person who says "I need to spend more one on one time with [kid]" but never, ever makes an effort to do anything along those lines, but gets resentful when I do because then he's missing out. The net result: whole family misses out because he doesn't want to.
Again, OP, I think you need to work WITH him, not against him, which is what your current attitude displays.
So you are better at making plans and arrangements with the kids, things that they will enjoy. Congratulations; you win that race. I'm betting he's better at some things with the kids, as well. Can't you just accept that as a limitation he has, and work with that? Try telling him in advance -- hey, on Labor Day weekend, I'm thinking we should do XXX. Not a good time for him? OK, the weekend before is better. I'm calling tonight and booking the tickets, OK?
Go from there.
Anonymous wrote:Um, can't you do fun stuff in the DC area? I'm not grasping that there is no compromise here. I think you are being unreasonable. You are making a giant leap from "can't go out of town" to "must sit at home".