Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?
When the child is a baby, I think it's a fine idea if you can swing it. I'd say it's harder when the child is older, like op's child's age, because transitions get more difficult, and stopping by for 15 minutes can be incredibly disruptive. I've done the WAH thing, and I can see why op is having a hard time with it. I had sitters to look after my kids while I worked, and I know popping in for 15 minutes would have been far more trouble than it was worth at that age.
This is so stupid. The kid will survive even if daddy comes home 4x a week for lunch break. Psycho DCUMers!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?
PP, how old are you? I don't think I'm that old but I don't know a single dad that would say "the wife" and "kiddo" and "hubs"...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:SAHM here. I would be annoyed. Some days I need my alone time. Time away makes the heart grow fonder. Does your DH expect you to make lunch everyday? Coming home for lunch everyday is too much.
Don’t you have alone time between when he leaves for the office and between lunch and the end of the day? Asking this as a former SAHM.
Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?
Anonymous wrote:My husband has been doing this since our son was born 3 years ago. He used to work from home but now he just comes home for lunch Monday- Thursday. It's not normal to be around your spouse this much, right? It's disruptive to our sons nap schedule and my husband is only here for 15-20 minutes. Our son gets upset because he wants to play with dada. Is this one of those things I should just suck up and deal with? I think a lot a lot of it is in my head. I feel guilty that the house looks messy or I haven't cooked dinner yet or this or that. We also live in a 1 bedroom apartment. Sometimes our son is napping and he wakes up because he hears the front door open. Today I just blew up at my husband and told him to stop coming home. He gave our son puzzles that I had put away on purpose because of the mess he creates. Some days he will give him play dough for example and it creates such a mess! I am scrubbing the rub for hours after this. I remember my husbands friend made a comment about my husband working from home all the time when our son was a newborn. He asked us how we can stand being around each other 247. It got me thinking that it may not be a good idea to see each other everyday for lunch. On Fridays my husband goes to a church lunch and he always annoys me every Friday and ask if I am coming too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?
When the child is a baby, I think it's a fine idea if you can swing it. I'd say it's harder when the child is older, like op's child's age, because transitions get more difficult, and stopping by for 15 minutes can be incredibly disruptive. I've done the WAH thing, and I can see why op is having a hard time with it. I had sitters to look after my kids while I worked, and I know popping in for 15 minutes would have been far more trouble than it was worth at that age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?
When the child is a baby, I think it's a fine idea if you can swing it. I'd say it's harder when the child is older, like op's child's age, because transitions get more difficult, and stopping by for 15 minutes can be incredibly disruptive. I've done the WAH thing, and I can see why op is having a hard time with it. I had sitters to look after my kids while I worked, and I know popping in for 15 minutes would have been far more trouble than it was worth at that age.

Anonymous wrote:What on Earth is your son doing with play dough that it causes you to scrub for hours. That's not normal. You sound insecure and anxious.
Anonymous wrote:SAHM here. I would be annoyed. Some days I need my alone time. Time away makes the heart grow fonder. Does your DH expect you to make lunch everyday? Coming home for lunch everyday is too much.
Anonymous wrote:Soon to be dad here. I plan on stopping by during lunch breaks to see the wife and soon to be kiddo. I would assume the wife would love to see me at home helping change a diaper, feed, or play with the little one, but this post has got me thinking! Maybe moms that have given birth recently, don't want too much contact with their hubs?