Anonymous wrote:I only have one child and am having trouble with this as well. Part of the issue is I work and am also the primary parent, which makes me more annoyed half the time. I think for us date night is really helpful, but I wish I had more advice for you.
Anonymous wrote:Date night 2 nights a month
Sex 3 times a week even if your tired
Hold hands more, touch more, kiss good night and good bye
Little things like love notes or occasional small presents for no reason
Sleep naked
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be kind to each other. Look for ways to say nice things, do nice things, acknowledge the other person's efforts and be grateful. Even small stuff. And when that fails and I'm snippy, I own up and apologize.
Know that it's a short amount of time and you just have to get through it without any major battle scars.
Get babysitters. Don't be the people that refuse to ever leave your kids with other people. It's bad for your marriage.
Give each other alone time as a regularly scheduled event.
This is excellent advice. Especially apologizing with a quick kiss when you're tired and snippy. I've done this often as a sleep deprived mom and it brings what could have been a really shitty night into a good one again.
Anonymous wrote:Just talk. It doesn't have to take a lot of time, effort or money. What keeps us most connected is the little convos we have on a regular old weeknight, not the fancy date nights or 3x a week sex schedules or anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm okay with putting the kids first and so is DH, our relationship is rock solid. Married 19 years.
Thanks for your insightful tips.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who gave me this advice were relatives who have a ton of family nearby and use their parents/the grandparents like nannies. So ya, easy to have weekly date nights and weekends away when you have free child care all around.
Now that my kids are a little older, 4 and 6, we try to have a sitter once a month. I also think that while you don't need to put your marriage first, you do need to invest time in it and spend time together even if that is on the couch chatting once a week.
Yeah, I've noticed the same thing. Or people who have full-time nannies. I'm a sahm and we have neither so our date nights are weekend nights spent watching movies together and drinking wine (now that the 1-year old sleeps through the night), talking until late night while finishing off the wine, and then having some wild sex. I also don't actually believe in putting the marriage "first." I believe the needs of our children, those of us as individuals, and care of our relationship are all "firsts" and you prioritize based on urgency in the moment. For example, sex is an important connecting point for dh and me but if my baby is screaming in the middle of the night, we're going to stop doing that to take care of her. Frankly, in the pre-elementary years (maybe beyond but we're not there yet), I think the children usually do come first but that doesn't mean the relationship gets nothing.
Many of us don't have family nearby or full-time nannies. Babysitters. When the kids are a bit older (my minimum age is 2), use a high school student. Ours is $12/hour. You don't have to be out for hours or spend a ton of money. Have a nice casual dinner for 2 hours.
Anonymous wrote:I go out once a week on my own - either to a dance or yoga class with friends, or to see a movie with someone, or go to a comedy club or something - even just sitting in a Starbucks and reading a magazine for two hours.
DH goes out once a week on HIS own.
We go out every Friday night together. Either just the two of us, or with other friends.
DH gets home before me, and feeds the kids dinner while cooking our dinner (they eat the prior night's leftovers) and then he and I eat dinner together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The people who gave me this advice were relatives who have a ton of family nearby and use their parents/the grandparents like nannies. So ya, easy to have weekly date nights and weekends away when you have free child care all around.
Now that my kids are a little older, 4 and 6, we try to have a sitter once a month. I also think that while you don't need to put your marriage first, you do need to invest time in it and spend time together even if that is on the couch chatting once a week.
Yeah, I've noticed the same thing. Or people who have full-time nannies. I'm a sahm and we have neither so our date nights are weekend nights spent watching movies together and drinking wine (now that the 1-year old sleeps through the night), talking until late night while finishing off the wine, and then having some wild sex. I also don't actually believe in putting the marriage "first." I believe the needs of our children, those of us as individuals, and care of our relationship are all "firsts" and you prioritize based on urgency in the moment. For example, sex is an important connecting point for dh and me but if my baby is screaming in the middle of the night, we're going to stop doing that to take care of her. Frankly, in the pre-elementary years (maybe beyond but we're not there yet), I think the children usually do come first but that doesn't mean the relationship gets nothing.