Anonymous wrote:I'm a ftm, our dd is 6 months old now. From her birth I feel like I have had to teach my husband everything. He's never been around babies before so I expected him to need help learning how to change a diaper or make a bottle, etc and I was happy to show him all of that. It was cute to see him learn how to hold her and care for her. But now I have to remind him of basic safety precautions regularly (don't leave a baby that can roll on the couch unattended etc). I try to tell myself that I need to let go and trust him to figure it out, but sometimes I am genuinely fearful for my daughter's well being.
Today he asked me if I thought it would be okay if he left to run a quick errand while DD was napping. Alone. No other adults present. I nearly died. And then I had to try and remain calm while I told him absolutely not and list all the reasons why that would be so dangerous. I love my husband, I really do. And he is normally a really smart guy. But I need him to get with the program and I don't know how to make that happen. I hate feeling like a nag and I hate what this is doing to our relationship. I've tried to have a normal conversation with him but it doesn't seem to sink in. Am I just being crazy? Anyone else have these problems? Suggestions?
You might try thinking about it like this.
When your baby was a newborn, your husband had to learn the newborn stuff. How to change diapers. How to feed her. How to hold her. How to put her to sleep. She is now 6 months old, which marked a very real transition for my first (second due any day now). The routines and requirements were different starting about then. What she ate was different. How she slept was different. How she was able to play was different. Things that used to be safe were not safe anymore. Then 6 months later, she learned how to walk, and a lot of things changed again. It's a constant readjustment process that is on a 4-6 month cycle. You might be more attuned to it than he is.
I think that your first mistake was being the expert who taught him all the newborn stuff in the first place. He now sees you as the book where he can get all the answers, so he asks you, and then you feel frustrated with his supposed incompetence. Would you feel less frustrated if he was asking someone else, or looking in a book? I think it's realistic for you to have a conversation with him about basic common sense things. Your baby is mobile or close to mobile so no, he shouldn't leave her in a place where she could fall, and leaving a baby alone in a house is not appropriate unless you're going no further than like, the car in the driveway or the mailbox or something. But one way or another, you set yourself up as the expert early on and really should not be particularly surprised that he now relies on you for information.