Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You do have to be the bad cop. I am, but I'm also the reliable one, the one who arranges play dates, helps with homework, makes lunches, can handle tough situations, etc., etc. You will (eventually) be seen as the one who cares. Dad may be fun at times, but it's mom who can be counted on. Can you arrange your schedule to be home earlier and make sure homework is done before dh even gets home?
So cool, you do absolutely everything for no appreciation from your tag along so-nothing spouse. Awesome
Anonymous wrote:My mother was super controlling, to the point of being abusive. She still tries to be controlling, but I don’t play along anymore. My parenting style is relaxed. I’m lucky that my teen makes good decisions. I only step in when it’s needed, which is not very often. Kids, especially teens, need to learn to make decisions, and the cost of good and bad decisions.
I was more militant when she was younger. That’s my biggest regret of parenting. Not only was it bad for our relationship, she was less likely to do things if it wasn’t of her own accord.
Anonymous wrote:You do have to be the bad cop. I am, but I'm also the reliable one, the one who arranges play dates, helps with homework, makes lunches, can handle tough situations, etc., etc. You will (eventually) be seen as the one who cares. Dad may be fun at times, but it's mom who can be counted on. Can you arrange your schedule to be home earlier and make sure homework is done before dh even gets home?
Anonymous wrote:If the problem is his parenting style, and not your relationship with him, I don't see how giving him half time full autonomy with the children solves a single problem. And it seems like teens will want to spend more than half time with the "fun" parent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How does he explain his mindset?
My friend's husband is similar. He was self-driven as a child with non-interventionist parents, and thinks everyone should have that family schematic. That if the kid doesn't want it for himself, then it's no good helicoptering.
Which is so wrong of him. His child has thrown up red flags for dyslexia and ADHD ever since early elementary, and he has always refused to have her evaluated. Then he says "she's not academic, it's fine". It breaks my heart, because my son struggled with similar handicaps, and we got him evaluated and treated, and he is now successful in school and every door is open for him.
So what's wrong with your friend? Is there a reason she isn't getting her child assessed? How does one parent's 'refusal' result in an actual lack of access to assessment? Is she an abused wife? She can pull the kid out of school and go to some drs!
OP is your husband wealthy and he plans on bankrolling your kids for life? If not, I don't understand his logic. Does he know how much crippling them will cost him? If he doesn't care for their futures on an emotional level, maybe he will care for his on a financial level.
Anonymous wrote:You're the parent, too. Are you not capable of making your children follow your rules? Surely he's not the only parent with them 24/7.