Anonymous wrote:OP can you co-opt some of this need to be with you into useful activity?
Example, our whole family washed the car yesterday, then planted some veggies in the garden.
Or I'll fold laundry while my sons color at the same table so I can do something and be with them too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, you should feel a bit guilty. Your child is in school all day. You can play for a little bit after school and then tell the child you want some you time so give you an hour alone. I thought you were talking about a preschooler. Your child is old enough where you can say go play by yourself.
My issue isn't the weeknights, between when I get off work and pick him up and dinner and homework and such, this is not much of an issue on the weekdays, I give him my attention from 6-8:30 then I have alone time. It's more of an issue on the weekends. He's up at 7 at the latest. Sometimes he plays alone, but then wakes me up and anticipates my full attention for the whole day.
BECAUSE HE ONLY SEES YOU FOR 2 HOURS A DAY DURING THE WEEK.
It is what it is, OP. He misses you. He needs you. You probably only have a couple more MONTHS of this. Be the mom. Be there. Or, cut back on your hours and be present during the week.
Anonymous wrote:pp and I should add...this will take a while to shift so there will be ups and downs. Don't be afraid of your kid having negative emotions. He may be upset about the change, which would be a normal reaction.
A pp said that she let's her kid watch more TV because she won't play alone. Kids who are bored are more creative. Let them be upset without time with you or TV - try it for a month and see what happens. The more assured you are of the plan, they will know you are in charge and therefore trust the process and themselves.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Honestly, you should feel a bit guilty. Your child is in school all day. You can play for a little bit after school and then tell the child you want some you time so give you an hour alone. I thought you were talking about a preschooler. Your child is old enough where you can say go play by yourself.
My issue isn't the weeknights, between when I get off work and pick him up and dinner and homework and such, this is not much of an issue on the weekdays, I give him my attention from 6-8:30 then I have alone time. It's more of an issue on the weekends. He's up at 7 at the latest. Sometimes he plays alone, but then wakes me up and anticipates my full attention for the whole day.
Anonymous wrote:My kids are the same so I can relate. What I do is give them several minutes of concentrated, non-distracted attention throughout the day. Like 20-30 minutes where I really try to fully engage during that time on whatever they are interested in. Then I feel less guilty about saying, "not now, I'm working on something" during the other times of the day. I find they get needier if I'm only half listening all the time. I also try to find things that are interesting to everyone. For example, we love hiking or just long walks in the neighborhood. I get some exercise and they can just talk my ear of the whole time and everyone is happy. Also, try to establish times of the day where it is a quiet time. Then you can recharge.
Anonymous wrote:My take from your posts:
*You need to ditch the guilt. He is feeding into this. You need to re-write the narrative that he *deserves* a sibling if that's what is feeding the guilt. By you dealing with your negative feelings, you will help him.
*You spend WAY too much time with him. 2.5 hours of uninterrupted time is a lot of time every weekday. And, all weekend!?
*You are not teaching him to be independent because you are not independent. You spend all of your time with him. You need to carve out time for yourself and let him know. "John, I will be reading for 1 hour because I really love this book. You are welcome to sit on the couch and read silently too." Or, "I need some downtime, so we will start the game in 1 hour." If you are not spending time on your interests and hobbies, how will know that's a "thing" that healthy people do.
*You are doing activities you don't enjoy, so you end up resentful and end up risking your relationship because you were untruthful. What happens when someone you're dating says, "but you love coffee, you always drank it with me." But, you only did that for the other person. Don't lie to your kids about who you are. I detest crafts. I told my kids that if they wanted to do them they were on their own. If they wanted time with me then we could play board games, which I enjoy.
*You haven't given him the skills for resilience and self-acceptance. If my kids came to me with a drawing asking for approval, I would turn it on them, "What do you think of your drawing?" It doesn't matter what I think, does it? Besides, when I tell my kid now, "That's incredible" they believe me because I don't let them use me to validate their work.
Finally, this doesn't have anything to do with him being an only. I know a family with 3 kids and they cannot be another level of a house without their parents (they are in upper elementary and middle school). It's about coddling your kids. Teach your son how to do his laundry, how to cook, how to figure something out. Kids don't inherently know this, so it has to be taught, but it will go a long way in making him resilient. This seems more imperative for an only because he won't have siblings to rely on. Just remember OP that he is modeling off you - be good to yourself and set boundaries.